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Everything posted by PietroParis
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I suspect you misunderstood my comment, it does not really matter here why you cannot spar. What I meant is that, in general, a 700yo Juyo-level blade should not be sparred with by anybody, nor should it be used for any other kind of practical exercise. If I misunderstood your sentences about "kata purposes" and "use it on foot", so much the better. Otherwise, I don't think this is a topic that will find much sympathy in this forum.
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Somehow I doubt that the sword lovers in this forum will be reassured by the fact that you can’t spar. They worry that you would want to use a 700yo Juyo-level blade for any kind of practical exercise. At least that is what your sentence below suggests: “If I’m going to buy something I have to be assured of its practical abilities, for kata purposes. This was previously a tachi though has been shortened down, correct? So I’d be able to use it on foot as I’ll never get a horse.” To give you an example, I’ve heard that serious collectors in Japan would stuff a paper napkin in their mouth when examining a high-quality blade, to avoid damaging it with their breath...
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This older thread might add some context to the question:
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I case anybody doesn't know it yet, that book is available for free here: https://archive.org/details/japanesenameshow00koopuoft
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This site is also useful, you can identify a kanji starting from the "radicals" it contains: https://jisho.org/
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A search in the forum reveals that the seller has a somewhat mixed reputation: https://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/search/?&q=daimyou54eb
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Shipping companies “pre-process” the customs fees, I suspect they apply a blanket 20% VAT rate to simplify their lives. Or maybe they pay the correct rate to the customs and pocket the difference... I am currently in a dispute with DHL: after correctly identifying an object as antique, with a tariff code that in France should result in a 5.5% rate, they charged me 20% nonetheless.
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New Forum Software Update.
PietroParis replied to Brian's topic in Forum Technical Details and Maintenance
I see it on a desktop computer but not on a tablet. [EDIT: forget about it, I see it also on the tablet] -
https://buyee.jp/item/search/query/刀掛け
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Another standard scam is when the seller on eBay does not actually own the item that is on sale on Yahoo Japan. They list it on eBay for a much higher price and buy it from YJP only after they have found a sucker, pocketing the difference. If something goes wrong (e.g. the price shoots up on YJP) they find some excuse to cancel the deal. Often you will see multiple sellers on eBay hawking the same item from YJP. When I see that, I sometimes troll the eBay seller asking for additional pictures of the item, of course there's always a reason why they cannot send them... P.S. an extreme example: I bought a pair of Bizen beer tumblers through Buyee for 2400 JPY (about $22), and I noticed that a different seller was hawking the very same tumblers on eBay for $319!
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Infuriating. I would pester DHL as well, after all they should take responsibility for the delivery.
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I just meant that the two halves of the handle are usually kept together by rice glue. Anyway I know next to nothing about swords, some more-experienced members of the forum will certainly advise you on how to properly preserve yours.
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Bringback swords usually come in military mounts, whereas this one is in a storage sheath called shirasaya (to state the obvious, the handle has come apart). Do you know if your grandfather had the shirasaya made at a later time?
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Noshi-themed tsuba signed Namitoshi. It just sold quite cheap on Catawiki, but it looks in bad condition and possibly depatinated:
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Museo d'Arte Orientale, Venezia
PietroParis replied to PietroParis's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
Thanks for your intervention, the reach of the NMB community never fails to impress... -
Hi All, These days I am visiting my elderly mother in North-Eastern Italy for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, so I took the opportunity to go to the Asian Art Museum (Museo d'Arte Orientale) in Venice (see also here for a virtual 3D tour). I am sorry to say that the exhibition feels old-fashioned and somewhat disappointing: the artifacts are amassed in dark vitrines with little context and no attribution, and it is left to the viewer to pick the good stuff from the background noise. For what concerns Nihonto, I recall hundreds of undistinguished koshirae, three or four vitrines of sword fittings (including some really nice stuff, unfortunately the reflections on the glass prevented me from taking decent pictures), one vitrine of arrowheads, one vitrine of bare tanto blades with showy horimono, and finally one vitrine with fifteen bare sword blades: The surprise came when I looked closer: many of the blades sported big, fat fingerprints!!! I got hold of two staff members and showed them the problem, they told me that they would report it to the person in charge of the conservation. However, it did not look like they were taking me too seriously: at first they thought I was referring to the hamon, my reaction to that was a bit piqued...
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Efu (also read Kofu) means Edo. See e.g. this thread: https://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/topic/18066-tsuba-translation/
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That badly scratched Namitoshi shown a few posts above is on sale again, with a new set of dark pictures trying to conceal the condition (left: old pic; right: new pic)
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To state the obvious, the left column of the label reproduces the characters on the tsuba.
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For the record, this link would have been sufficient: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/313590069055
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While I fully agree that buying modern ivory knockoffs supports crime and the slaughter of elephants, I think that the question referred to antique ivory netsuke. For those the legislation varies a lot depending on the location. For example, pre-1947 ivory artefacts (not raw ivory) can currently be bought and sold freely within the EU, but their import/export to/from the EU requires a certificate identifying them as antiques. In Japan it is legal to sell/buy even modern ivory artefacts, but it is illegal to export them. I presume that within the US the rules vary from state to state.
