nektoalex Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Greetings! I ask you to help attribute this blade, since, apparently, it is not registered or prefabricated. Thanks! 1 Quote
Navy Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Interesting; the experts will tell you more, but if I don’t get wrong this is a showato military blade (with Showa stamp), in a civilian koshirae but with leather combat cover. Quote
Brian Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Arsenal blade, oil quenched Showato in alternate mounts from that period. We see these occasionally. Not sure if they were special order for those with a bit of money. 1 Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Great sword, I like it very much. Beautiful Tsuba. I guess the Fuchi Kashira shows cherry blossoms to? Looks absolut authentic. Please give the leather some care with leatherfat. A perfect example of a civillian employee sword. compare it here. http://ohmura-study.net/728.html 2 Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 xxxx yoshi (?) masa saku kore Very nice condition of the blade. Attractive hamon. 1 Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Alexsandr could you show a picture of the fuchi/kashira? If it is the same as in the tsuba shown you have matching fittings. Quote
Navy Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Chris, why the second mekugi ana? Born as military sword and subsequently fitted with the civilian koshirare? Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 No it was never an officer sword. The Koshirae is authentic. The blade is forged by hand but not in the traditional way. But this doesn't matter. Its a carefully and well made sword. It was carryied by an employee of the IJA or a lower rank. I dont know why it has a second mekugi ana we can only speculate. I cant read the full name. Sorry. Edit: i notice there was a second hole in the tsuka, hmm... maybe refitted? 2 Quote
nektoalex Posted November 25, 2019 Author Report Posted November 25, 2019 Kashira was apparently replaced, possibly the whole tsuka. Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Did you look under the leather around the Fuchi? Maybe it is a cherry blossom that fits to the tsuba? Quote
SAS Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 Interesting that one hole looks punched, while the other is drilled.....paging Dr. Ken! 1 Quote
nektoalex Posted November 25, 2019 Author Report Posted November 25, 2019 Did you look under the leather around the Fuchi? Maybe it is a cherry blossom that fits to the tsuba? Now there is no way to check Quote
vajo Posted November 25, 2019 Report Posted November 25, 2019 My last try on the smith is 竹内兼正作之 takeuchi kanemasa saku kore But i'm not very good in reading kanji Quote
Ian B3HR2UH Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 I don't think these were special order for those with a bit of money but rather something purchased by those who couldn't afford anything better . They really are cheap and nasty . Ian Brooks 2 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 Great sword, I like it very much. Beautiful Tsuba. I guess the Fuchi Kashira shows cherry blossoms to? Looks absolut authentic. Please give the leather some care with leatherfat. A perfect example of a civillian employee sword. compare it here. http://ohmura-study.net/728.html That was interesting to read Ohmura's page on this, thanks Chris. He seems to claim that this configuration/pattern was a dedicated "army civilian employee" style. I wonder if that is an error in translation or if it was exactly what he meant? Other than this page, I have never seen anything or any other source calling it as such. Yet, the existance of another sword, fitted with the same style might support his claim. Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 Agree with Ian, the quality on these seems to be consistently quite low. An interesting example nonetheless and a good one for a complete military sword collector. 1 Quote
SteveM Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 天池義正作之 Amachi Yoshimasa saku kore 4 Quote
vajo Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 Ah, my first guess was right. Thanks Steve. Quote
Dave R Posted November 26, 2019 Report Posted November 26, 2019 I don't think these were special order for those with a bit of money but rather something purchased by those who couldn't afford anything better . They really are cheap and nasty . Ian Brooks I am inclined to agree, the fuchi-kashira on my example are thin stamped brass... nice menuki though as far as can be seen. One day perhaps a catalogue will turn up with prices. I increasing suspect that they are just civilian mounts for Showa era katana, pressed into service when the owner got drafted. Quote
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