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Posted

Here's a link to pictures of the sword I took. I can take more, if needed.

 

http://imgur.com/a/vMJrO

 

Please excuse my cat. He likes the lanyard on my camera. :)

 

History of this piece: I remember it being in my grandfather's basement. I used to play with it as a child. My grandfather has gone into a skilled care facility and his house has been sold. When cleaning his house out, my mom found several old edged weapons; including this sword. When I walked into the room where she's stashed all the pieces, I saw the tang sticking out of the scabbard and immediately recognized it as Japanese in origin. When I pulled the blade out, I knew it was a Japanese "katana-style" sword.

 

According to my mom, however, there's no way it could be Japanese because the person who gave it to my grandfather kept it in a shack that belonged to his family for generations. Apparently none of these people had ever left the country or participated in any war. But there was a house nearby that the rebels used to store weapons during the American Revolutionary War, therefore, it's an officer's blade from the Revolutionary War. She said "all swords curve like that and all swords have tangs; you're just obsessed with Asian things." SIGH.

 

Anyway, I'm pretty sure it's a 98 series shin-gunto. Can anyone at least confirm that it is in fact a shin-gunto?

 

There are no stamps on it anywhere, which I find strange. Someone suggested that it might be a later model, when Japan was running dry, and may in fact have been produced completely by machine from cheap steel. The blade is fairly rusted, but the edge isn't knicked and the point... I forget the name for it... is intact and quite sharp.

 

This isn't a piece I want to see sold. So my next question is: Since this isn't a traditionally produced Japanese sword, would it be okay to polish, remount, and build a katana-kake for? Most people have told me definitely do not polish it, because (long rant about stuff concerning traditional Japanese swords) - however this is not a traditional Japanese sword, correct? I want to see this sword glow again, but unfortunately the blade itself doesn't justify a professional polish, far less a traditional polish by a skilled toshigi.

 

So, assuming it's okay to polish (since the sword isn't actually worth anything monetarily speaking and it's value is purely sentimental), how would I go about doing that? I have the very basics down on how this is done, but no idea how to start or get the proper materials.

 

EDIT: Wanted to add - the blade is 26.5 inches long (from the very tip to the start of the tang) and with the tang included is about 32.5 inches long (I think, measured it the other day).

Posted

Tough to say much with these pics except, yes, you have a shingunto on your hands and STOP TOUCHING THE BLADE. It's not as though you'll do much more harm since it needs a polish but the oil in your skin will cause rust. So can you take some pics of the following:

- better pics of both sides of the nakago (tang)

- try to find a couple spots not covered in rust and photo the blade itself

 

This will help as it's impossible to say much here.

Posted
Tough to say much with these pics except, yes, you have a shingunto on your hands and STOP TOUCHING THE BLADE. It's not as though you'll do much more harm since it needs a polish but the oil in your skin will cause rust. So can you take some pics of the following:

- better pics of both sides of the nakago (tang)

- try to find a couple spots not covered in rust and photo the blade itself

 

This will help as it's impossible to say much here.

 

I'll try to take some pictures tomorrow because it seems my mom has moved the items somewhere. :(

 

I'll tell you, in case I can't get a picture, there is no visible hamon (I looked for over an hour lol), there's no fuller, and the patina is blackened and marred with patina - you can't see any stamping or signing on it, I checked. :dunno:

Posted

You can tell your mom it is 100% a WW2 Japanese sword.

No..you cannot polish it yourself..even if it is an arsenal sword. Yes, it can be restored quite well. There are polishers who can do a good job on a WW2 Showato that won't cost an arm and a leg. But first you need to see if it is a Showato...as there is not enough info to determine if traditionally made yet or not. Just use oil for now to protect it...if you get it back. Mom doesn't like swords it seems :glee:

Btw..there is a hamon there, even if not visible. I think it is visible in one pic though. It alters the way it rusts.

 

Brian

Posted

As said above.....

Until you decide what to do with it I would get a clean cotton cloth and with a few drops of oil on it and run it along the blade ( sharp edge away lol)

It really does need oil

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