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Tsuku

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  1. Some people choose to share their collections and others do not. Everyone has their own reasons for making that choice. I don’t think it’s appropriate for anyone else to judge that. Separately, I think it is very natural to wonder “where do I fit in the collecting world.” The truth is that there is almost always a bigger fish. Collecting (anything) gets easier when you make your peace with that.
  2. Yes exactly. I do not understand how we keep having this discussion either. I am not saying anything new. "I want an ko-nie like grains of perfect glittering sand and flowing sunagashi and inazuma and kinsuji and it should definitely have an ichimai-boshi and be ubu kenzen. But it's okay if it's not Juyo." — your problem is not that it's going to be juyo, it's that it's going to be juyo bunkazai. This is a failure of money or maybe understanding of market dynamics. "I bought this out of polish Muromachi suriage mumei wakizashi for $100 on eBay, tell me it's a great sword" — your problem is that there is little for this blade to teach you. This is a failure of studying. If you only have the budget for the second, that is totally fine. And anyone who sneers at you is misguided. There is always a bigger fish, unless you are Godzilla or maybe Mothra, and if you are a kaiju you are not on NMB and definitely not asking this question... Anyways, just don't confuse the first and the second.
  3. I think it is necessary to distinguish between the intellectual/academic aspect of studying and the financial realities of collecting. Consider Rayhan's list, which I will paraphrase here: Suriage and/or mumei is okay in pre-Muromachi work and not afterwards. Buy swords in good polish. Make sure any koshirae fits. Buy swords and not papers, but consider papered blades first. Upgrade swords when you can. These rules are mostly about the financial aspect of collecting: bluntly, it is easier to re-sell a blade that meets these criteria. So now let us consider the intellectual/academic aspect. Suriage is less than desirable because it does two things: it changes the sugata and we lose material (both overall and potentially a mei). But if you wanted the "best" ko-Bizen, and you had your pick of every blade in existence, and price was absolutely no object — you would probably pick an ubu zaimei example. So really, from an academic perspective, suriage and mumei are NOT okay, REGARDLESS of the period. We want ubu zaimei. But here practical reality kicks in. We do not have the pick of every blade, we do not have infinite budget, and we have to make some compromises. People should buy the things they can afford and that they like. If someone wants to have a collection of kazu-uchimono, there is nothing intrinsically wrong with that. The problem is when there is a misunderstanding of the commercial realities of the market or a gap in scholarship. If someone thinks a kazu-uchimono is on par from an academic/historical perspective with a Gojo Kanenaga or Tomonari or whatnot, I think this is a failing of their education. But that doesn't mean their kazu-uchimono collection doesn't have a story to tell. You do not have to spend a lot of money to have developed meaningful understanding. I have more than a few things that I bought because I liked them, not because they were "important." But that doesn't mean that I can't understand the nature of what "important" means and why something the example I own is not going to command the highest prices in the market.
  4. An observation — all journeys come in stages. At the beginning, the work is hard, but it is also exciting. Growth is fast, and it feels like we make progress with every passing day. But eventually, we enter into the long slog of the intermediate learner, where progression slows down and it feels like a drag... the moments of reward are increasingly few and far between. And eventually, as advanced learners, we might spend hours (or years...) in work, just to advance our knowledge by what feels like a few millimeters. I don't think this means that the journey itself is dying, it means that our attitude towards it is changing. That can be both good and bad. If it's that feeling of treasure-hunting that you're after, I'm sure there are still gems out there in the dusty pawn shops. Maybe they are fewer and farther between, but doesn't that make them all the more precious? If it's learning, I think there is nothing to do but embrace the suck. If it's community, well, I'm sure someone else will have more productive advice than I.
  5. From 吉田兼好の徒然草 — Yoshida Kenkō's "Essays in Idleness," written 1330-1332 — Some things never change.
  6. At the risk of sounding Zen about it: if a puzzle does not have a certain answer, that does not mean it has nothing to teach you. It is the step between “not all puzzles have answers” and “no puzzles have true answers.”
  7. I’m not personally the greatest fan of Kagemitsu. Awataguchi smiths, especially Yoshimitsu, the core Sōshū group (Yukimitsu, Norishige especially), and Samonji should all be mentioned here as well.
  8. Against my better judgement — I posted this example earlier. Perhaps it was overlooked or an appropriately in-depth study was not made. This blade was Jūyō-tōken in the 44th shinsa. The NBTHK paperwork clearly attributes it as a 薙刀直し刀 naginata-naoshi katana, right there on the front of the certificate. A copy of the setsumei is attached. I will draw your attention to a few points. 形状 薙刀直し造 keijō naginata-naoshi zō 帽子 乱れ込み先小丸 bōshi midare-komi-saki kō-maru [kaeri] 茎 大磨上 nakago ō-suriage 説明 ... 本作は薙刀を磨上げて刀としたもので... honsaku wa naginata o suriagete katana to shita mo node... "Here we have a naginata which was shortened and made into a katana..." Thus: NBTHK calls this a naginata-naoshi and and describes the form as such. An intact boshi with kaeri remains. NBTHK specifically says in the setsumei that it originated as a naginata that was shortened.
  9. Using a shintō Tadatsuna is inappropriate. Shintō naginata were not generally cut down and the shape of the naginata changed dramatically from kotō examples. In good faith, here is a side-by-side example that illustrates how this is possible. The left is a Shikkake naginata that went Tokuju in the 26th shinsa. The right is the oshigata for the Juyo Kunimune I linked earlier. Obviously the Kunimune started from a different blade, so it is not a dead-nuts match, but I think from this it is very clear how the boshi can be preserved in the course of naginata-naoshi.
  10. Here is another example, this time a Saburo Kunimune. This very clearly shows the preserved kaeri and the NBTHK describes the boshi as simply "midare-komi with ko-maru-kaeri." There is no yokote and this is unquestionably a naginata-naoshi.
  11. Tsuku

    Oil on Horimono

    Be careful with getting gunk out of horimono. Old uchiko often accumulates there and it can be a source of scratches.
  12. In a bit of a contemplative mood, and I had my first sword out earlier tonight. It still moves me just as much as it did the first time I studied it — Osafune Kanemitsu daitō with a Hon'ami Kōjō kinzogan-mei. As a student, I owe much to many, as I think we all do — but here a tremendous amount of credit goes to Darcy. Without his help, I would have simply kept reading by the water's edge instead of jumping into the ocean. One can get far with books, but the objects make the lessons real.
  13. I do not mean to disparage anything shown here in the slightest — there has indeed been an exceptional blade that was recently, and very generously, shared here. But, in all honesty, I think you are selling some of the collections of your fellow NMB members rather short.
  14. Tsuku

    Hagire

    I just want to clarify this because I think the discussion has conflated things a bit. A tantō has a blade less than 1 shaku in length, 30.3 cm. A wakizashi has a blade length of between 1 and 2 shaku, and anything over 2 shaku is a katana or tachi. You said your blade has a length of 28 cm, so it is a tantō. An aikuchi koshirae is one that lacks a tsuba (example). A hamidashi koshirae in comparison has a small tsuba (example).
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