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Posted

Jeremiah,

 

A truly wonderful blade, an apt and satisfying next piece for the collection.  I'm sure Jean is happy that it found a new owner that will treasure it as much as he had, care for it well.  Some things are meant to be.

 

Cheers,

    -S-

p.s.-The view from the summit is clearer than that of the valley.....continue to aim high.

  • Like 2
Posted

Congratulations Jeremiah. 

 

This is what collecting really means. You set yourself a goal, to find the best masame hada blade possible. What you have now is eerily close to the summit of masame craftmanship. Anything closer and prices moves exponentially for gradually less emotional dividends. 

 

The provenance is excellent. This blade comes from jean, a discerning collector, and before that was a on DTI consignment catalogue. Moreover, it was not papered at the time (carried risk) although mitigated by two authoritative sagayaki. The blade was bought at a good price, and then passed on to you for a good price also. This blade has Juyo potential and you should consider submitting it. It may not be a slam dunk first try, but it's clearly worth a shot.  

 

You could have browsed the big online dealers like a monkey on cocaine making impulsive purchases of problematic blades at a premium, seeking the next hit to feed the hoard. But no, you were patient. You waited, and when opportunity came up you took a social risk and you seized it.

 

Now that you're so close to the top, with two examples - the original masame and a latter shinshinto work paying homage to the method - you need to consider what to do. The wise answer, in my view, is not going to be more masame (That's hoarding) or better masame (price takes a steep elevator)Will you stop collecting? Will you move on to another attribute which fascinates you? Where to go... 

  • Like 2
Posted

Great story Jeremiah, you go the Japanese way to collect. Congrats to have such a sensei on your side.

 

Best

 

PS whats about a honory nickname MASAME Jeremiah

  • Like 3
Posted

Well done for achieving this! It is a very good sword and it epitomises Yamato and its archetype - whether Hosho or Tegai, it does not matter that much. Importantly it comes with a Kunzan sayagaki (these are rarer) and the old koshirae. So, a great package throughout.

 

I shall not make presumptions about what can be achieved economically by you or whether you might wish to continue buying masame hada swords or not. That would be over-reaching but there is a whole spectrum to collect within Yamato den and also in between Koto and ShinShinto (the two endpoints in your collection). In my own collecting approach I have decided to focus on one school and trace it from an old era to perhaps around early Muromachi at most (very likely I shall stop at Nanbokucho or very early Muromachi).

 

You have done very well and again - congratulations! Study and treasure the sword and it would give you many hours, days and years of enjoyment. Like others on the board, I have discovered new things in my blades when i look at them at different moments in time, with different light (various artificial lights but also daylight) and also laying them one next to another to contrast and compare.

  • Like 4
Posted

In all modesty (lol) all my swords are stunning, I keep the Yamato tanto and the juyo Ryokai. Unsold at the time being the Yasumitsu which is fantastic compare to what I have seen on the Web during the last decade. Generally, all daito for sale I have seen were suriage, this one is ubu with a ko kissaki and tachi signed.

  • Like 2
Posted

Jean

From what I know of your swords I would agree they are all stunning. 

Congratulatuons to Jeremiah for becoming the latest custodian of what is a fantastic looking sword. I admit to being more than a little envious :(

I have seen so few Hosho swords I cannot even attempt a reasoned assessment of  the validity of the differing opinions. In the end you have to ask does it matter?

what you now have is a sword that is nearly 700 years old in excellent condition and truly beautiful.

well done to all involved it is great when a sword finds the right home!

  • Like 2
Posted

... Like others on the board, I have discovered new things in my blades when i look at them at different moments in time, with different light (various artificial lights but also daylight) and also laying them one next to another to contrast and compare.

I've sometimes seen my swords in a different light when someone else is holding them and the light is right, as if a little distance changes the way one perceives the sugata.

 

Congratulations Jeremiah and I'm sure most of us are on the sidelines cheering mightily that a fellow collector has achieved a tightly held desire.  I just love your new sword, particularly the "spotted nie" sprinkled surface.  Magnificent.

 

BaZZa

  • Like 2
Posted

Wow!!! It’s hard to believe something that old can look so exquisitely perfect. Congrats buddy, I am sure the sword is thrilled to have a caretaker as competent as you.

 

The hada is a work of art, the kissaki is beyond clean... you deserve it!

  • Like 1

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