Brian
thanks for fixing the picture. it looks better. I am hoping someone on the list may own, or remeber a sword with this stamp that was signed, worth a try
A friend bought a sword that is not signed but has a "Hot Stamp". It is a hirazukuri katana with wild gunome/chogi. It is well made and i would guess late shinshinto or gendai. My friend is trying to idendify the maker. Has anyone seen this stamp before?
Thanks
i was just going on what i could see ( i realize there are no pictures of the blade). That is why i put such a large range. If the blade is not well made it should still bring close to $1000 on eBay as it is a signed katana in complete mounts, the flashy saya should help on eBay. Even if the blade appears well made the sword does not have a paper, is "out of the woodwork" so not in fresh polish, so i would think $3500 or so is about the max range. Maybe i am wrong, he asked for a value and i said it was a "guess". just trying to be helpful
it looks like a standard Showa era civilian sword (people were interested in swords during the 1930's when Japan was trying to expand its empire), you could buy swords like this at larger "department" stores. many were later used by army officers. It is probably not totally traditionaly made but i have seen some decent swords with grain that have a Showa stamp so they are partly hand made
Paul
not sure exactly what you need. from what i see the parts of the sword are "genuine" but not high quality. So from what i see it is "real and genuine". To say more with out a close examination of the blade is foolish. If it is a few hundered dollars it is probably fine, if the seller wants several hundred or 1k+ you will need clear pictures of the blade and you still run the risk of a hagire if it is not examined in hand
best i can do, hope it helps
I agree with ED. The mei looks questionable to me, masanori signed with a fine (sharp thin) chisel, but in your example the kanji are very "chippy" not as smooth as other references. Some of the kanji seem a bit too "squat"...... If it has ben owned by collectors in the past and has no papers i would be conscerned. I think it best to buy it based on the value of the blade, assuming it is mumei, if a seller wants a premuim based on the mei it seems logical that it waould have been papered in the past to vailidate the mei and the associated Premium
sword is a Showa sword, maybe hand made. but no need to spend time looking everything up, if you want a quick answer --- DROP EVERYTHING AND GO IMMEDIATLY AND GET THE 10K !!!! Deliver the sword on hand and knee if needed, the buyer has made an ofer "that you can't refuse"
i would second what Grey said. The sword has been here long before we were and will be here long after we are gone (if we care for them). So keep a light coat of oil on it. read books, go to shows and ask opinions from people who see it. Check the mei, maybe submit to a shinsa in the next few years. Then decide the polish the blade deserves (once you know what you have), and go from there. No need to make a quick decision
you have it right - good job. I have not seen the blade but it should be a good value for $100. Not sure what Kunihiro it is as he does not give much to go on, but if i have to guess i would say it is probably a gimei of Horikawa Kunihiro. The mei looks poorly written, it is stiff and "chippy". it may be another maker, or if it is a great blade you can remove the mei (after it is PROVED to be gimei if that is the case).
i do not know the blade length now,,,,, but i would think that if it is still a katana that the mei would have been folded over,,, no reason to cut it off and inset it ( i only see that with short - 2 kanji mei- that were from very long swords)............ seems strange