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Posted
29 minutes ago, Bruce Pennington said:

looks as if it's a 95 with a leather covered saya.

If the distribution of type 95s as reenlistment gifts were a common practice, it at least gives us another explanation as to how swords were brought back other than as "war trophies." 

 

John C.

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Posted
15 hours ago, John C said:

If the distribution of type 95s as reenlistment gifts were a common practice, it at least gives us another explanation as to how swords were brought back other than as "war trophies." 

 

John C.

Nice learning another reason/method for passing these out.  I think it was Fuller that described the fact that of the 600,000 swords collected by the Allies, they saved half (I think he stated somewhere around 260,000) to be "distributed."  Your example is clearly one of many ways they must have passed them out.

  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

Probably to speed up production. Urushi with black dye (roiro urushi?) on cloth gives thicker layer.

Edited by Rawa
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Posted
13 minutes ago, Justin Grant said:

Urushi on fabric is a well known Japanese Armor trick. You will find all sorts of pieces this way. It makes them strong and water resistant.

 

You can even find some koshirae where the tsukamaki has been lacquered, ostensibly for the same purpose.

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Posted
On 5/17/2026 at 10:37 AM, Nazar said:


 


Apologies for drifting off topic a little, but it looks like this one was so aggressively cleaned that the spine has gone from iori-mune to maru-mune or mitsu-mune.

 

Amongst wartime Gendaito and Showato, do we ever see maru-mune or mitsu-mune? I’m not sure I recall ever seeing something other than iori-mune. 
 

Best,

-Sam

 

 

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Posted
11 hours ago, Scogg said:

......it looks like this one was so aggressively cleaned that the spine has gone from iori-mune to maru-mune or mitsu-mune......

That was the guy who "cleaned" his car with an angle-grinder....:glee:

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Posted
17 hours ago, Scogg said:

spine has gone from iori-mune to maru-mune or mitsu-mune.

It seems the mune-machi (and ha-machi for that matter) is deeply cut. I wonder if the blade were a little too wide and it was done to fit a scabbard? Otherwise, I would think iori-mune would be standard.

 

John C.

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Posted
4 hours ago, John C said:

....I wonder if the blade were a little too wide and it was done to fit a scabbard? ....

John,

in that case, wouldn't it be easier to take some material off of the wooden scabbard liner?.

Posted

Indeed Jean, maybe "cleaned" was not the best word choice for this situation.

"Abraded" or maybe "grinded to oblivion" would have been more appropriate :thumbsup: :laughing:
-Sam

 

Posted
2 hours ago, ROKUJURO said:

in that case, wouldn't it be easier to take some material off of the wooden scabbard liner?

Possibly, yes. As a woodworker it would be my first thought. But the wood is very thin on those so maybe not enough "fleisch". We'll never know I guess.

 

John C. 

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