Brian Posted November 21, 2015 Report Posted November 21, 2015 I know these are not Nihonto, and look to me to be standard Chinese "martial arts" repros. But before I get into an argument with the owner/importer, I was wondering if anyone can tell me what these say on the nakago? Thanks Quote
Drago Posted November 21, 2015 Report Posted November 21, 2015 Looking at the numbers, the first 5 symbols say "year 2015", although according to the Internet, that's not really how they would spell it... But I only speak average Japanese, not Chinese. 二?一五年金?平? Quote
Caleb Mok Posted November 21, 2015 Report Posted November 21, 2015 "Made by Yu-something-Ping in 2015" (it doesn't matter what his name is) Yu is a common Chinese surname. Given names don't really follow any rules; you can use almost any word you'd use every day to make up your given name so although the 平 in his given name means peace, it, again, really doesn't matter what his name is. The name is 3 characters which is the norm for the VAST majority of everyone Chinese... Caleb Quote
Caleb Mok Posted November 21, 2015 Report Posted November 21, 2015 Sorry, that was rather condescending of me. His name is Yu Wei Ping (余伟平 ) in Mandarin and Simplified; Yu Wai Ping(餘偉平 ) in Cantones and Traditional. -Caleb 1 Quote
MAXBLISS888 Posted November 22, 2015 Report Posted November 22, 2015 Is this Chinese fake? The maker seems to put his name and date of making on the mei.. Quote
Jean Posted November 22, 2015 Report Posted November 22, 2015 Francis, It is not a nihonto because it is Chinese, that's all. Whether it is a fake or not does not matter. Same apply to Paul Chen's swords. Quote
Brian Posted November 22, 2015 Author Report Posted November 22, 2015 Repro/In-the-style-of, I guess. Same as all the other replicas out there. They call themselves Japanese swords, claim to be from some "small little forge in China producing forged and folded blades" that are always better than all the others, and always make huge claims of authenticity. Of course they all have genuine hamon, always produced by "clay heat treating" and some even have some hataraki. But they then tell you how collectible and rare they are. That's when I get angry. Quote
Caleb Mok Posted November 22, 2015 Report Posted November 22, 2015 Okay, as someone literally SURROUNDED by fakes: do we ~really~ need a made-in-China product to say "Made in Japan" for it to piss us off? Is it not enough that the packaging is SURROUNDED with not only Japanese words, but design style, pictures of Japanese people etc. to leave a sour taste in the mouth? And is it not enough that while many of us have found for ourselves that stuff genuinely made in Japan, that oftentimes cost more, usually do not disappoint whereas stuff made in inter alia China do, marketers of these Chinese products do everything they can to make their products more "Japanese" WITHOUT putting any effort into making it better? Sorry if i sound mad, not mad at anyone here, just the situation. I mean, on the other hand, you have the sold-out (maybe fake sell-out, maybe real u don't know) $1500 USD Marquis Yi or the $1800 Dragon Dao: PROUDLY made in China. Sorry just had to get that out of the system. Quote
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