micah Posted April 2, 2021 Report Posted April 2, 2021 so i have shown this wakizashi in Previous post but I've never shown really shown the blade really im not sure it looks muromachi it has koshisori .Micah Quote
Brian Posted April 2, 2021 Report Posted April 2, 2021 You aren't going to get anything from those pics except "It's a sword" This isn't a science and there is no hard and fast rule. You need shape, hamon and hada to make an educated guess. 2 Quote
micah Posted April 2, 2021 Author Report Posted April 2, 2021 13 minutes ago, Brian said: You aren't going to get anything from those pics except "It's a sword" This isn't a science and there is no hard and fast rule. You need shape, hamon and hada to make an educated guess. it has a faint suguha hamon and the file marks are still on the nakago Quote
ROKUJURO Posted April 3, 2021 Report Posted April 3, 2021 Micah, it is not surprising when a blade is older than the mounts. As Brian said, these photos do not allow an assessment, at least not for me. Perhaps you could provide some sharp photos of the NAKAGO with close-ups. That might help a bit. Unfortunately, the blade ist not only scratched/sandpapered, but even the SHINOGI has been rounded which is a symptom of very bad/wrong treatment. The same goes for the chips in the MONOUCHI. Quote
micah Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Posted April 3, 2021 1 hour ago, ROKUJURO said: Micah, it is not surprising when a blade is older than the mounts. As Brian said, these photos do not allow an assessment, at least not for me. Perhaps you could provide some sharp photos of the NAKAGO with close-ups. That might help a bit. Unfortunately, the blade ist not only scratched/sandpapered, but even the SHINOGI has been rounded which is a symptom of very bad/wrong treatment. The same goes for the chips in the MONOUCHI. it also has cuts on the spine i got it like that from Japan and was not done with sand paper it is way to smooth for that and most of the Scratches are even so either someone attempted to sharpen it or it came from satsuma like that alot of swords like it have the same finish from the other rebellion pieces the nakago was covered in kanji paper and wood shims Quote
chrstphr Posted April 3, 2021 Report Posted April 3, 2021 Regardless of the era, someone sanded the entire blade including removing all the patina from the nakago. In my opinion, this one is pretty much ruined and probably not fixable due to the cost outweighing the end worth. The file marks on the nakago look like the leftover damage from the sanding to remove the patina. Chris 1 Quote
micah Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Posted April 3, 2021 18 minutes ago, chrstphr said: Regardless of the era, someone sanded the entire blade including removing all the patina from the nakago. In my opinion, this one is pretty much ruined and probably not fixable due to the cost outweighing the end worth. The file marks on the nakago look like the leftover damage from the sanding to remove the patina. Chris i dont care about the value at all or The condition of it not trying to fix it you cant any ways it has been polished to much it is to thin just want to give a rough estimate of what era and the nakago work was Probably done in the early 19th century because it was Wrapped in old paper and shimmed i had to take ot off most likely has not been taken off for 100 years or so because it was stuck good and plus to many forge flaws Quote
Bazza Posted April 3, 2021 Report Posted April 3, 2021 micah, with all due respects, it is a noble pursuit to try and fully understand what a particular sword is, but in this case I truly think it is a lost cause and not worth the intellectual agony. I have been down the same road decades ago when I was trying to understand Nihonto, so I appreciate your "need to know"... But (there is always a 'but') might I suggest you keep this sword for what you can see in it and get thee along to a sword collector's show or meeting and get to grips with what good swords in good condition look like. There are many rocks in the road to appreciating Nihonto and this is one of them. An anecdote from my distant past may be helpful. I once saw a sword in another collection and desired it, but kept my feeling to myself. A few years later I looked at it again and said to myself "What on earth did I ever see in that sword??!!" So, if you decide to keep this sword put it away in the back of a cupboard and look at it again in a few years. Come back here and tell us your feeling. Most of us will still be here... BaZZa. 3 1 Quote
Dave R Posted April 3, 2021 Report Posted April 3, 2021 You call it a "satsuma" sword, and I would have liked to see the mounts to confirm this. My experience and research tells me that "satsuma" style mounts are the mark of a blade considered to be at the end of it's usable life during the era when swords were weapons not collectable. They rarely if ever reward further work, because they were not considered worth the effort, even in an era with numerous polishers and craftsmen to do the job. I do like them, and consider them collectable as is though. But they are not diamonds in the rough with hidden potential. You were lucky to be able to remove the hilt, these are known to have sometimes been glued in with resin or lacquer because they were never going to be maintained further. Quote
micah Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Posted April 3, 2021 1 hour ago, Dave R said: You call it a "satsuma" sword, and I would have liked to see the mounts to confirm this. My experience and research tells me that "satsuma" style mounts are the mark of a blade considered to be at the end of it's usable life during the era when swords were weapons not collectable. They rarely if ever reward further work, because they were not considered worth the effort, even in an era with numerous polishers and craftsmen to do the job. I do like them, and consider them collectable as is though. But they are not diamonds in the rough with hidden potential. You were lucky to be able to remove the hilt, these are known to have sometimes been glued in with resin or lacquer because they were never going to be maintained further. i have shown the hilt on here just not the blade in detail here are the pictures again anyway i took some new pics ito is made of linen like some of the other satsuma blades but i suppose it was quite common for normal blades as well Quote
micah Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Posted April 3, 2021 and Bazza i really like the sword even though i have much better one next to it i dont plan to get rid of it even though most people think it is junk even if it was rusted i would still like it i own a nice kanbun waki i would buy another one like it again if i got a chance Quote
AntiquarianCat Posted April 5, 2021 Report Posted April 5, 2021 Hello Micah, I’m sort of confused as to why you call it a satsuma sword. If you mean the koshirae, it doesn’t look like this has the two holes you would expect from a Satsuma tsuba. It doesn’t look much like a lot of the very fine examples of Satsuma koshirae out there https://yuhindo.com/ishiguro-masayoshi-koshirae/ Did you mean you think the mounts are from the Satsuma Rebellion and that is why they appear crude? If you mean the blade, the following traits are what you could expect from Satsuma work but your sword is too out of polish for such things to be discernible. As friendly advice from one beginner to another, I’d like to say that you’re better off by starting with swords that are in decent polish. It takes collectors with a lot more experience than either of us to size up swords in poor condition and guess on if they’re worth a restoration. Better to hang on to your money for stuff you’ll like more I think. 1 Quote
Dave R Posted April 5, 2021 Report Posted April 5, 2021 Hiya Juan, this is why I advocate that these swords be referred to as Okashi-to (loaned swords)rather than Satsuma rebellion pieces. There is already a category of Satsuma style swords, and generally fine swords they are. Why the other type got given the name is one of those bits of history, along with Type 3's, Naval Landing Swords, and Kamikaze daggers..... and probably from the same date and the same reasons.....Post War dealers! If you are unfamiliar with the term Okashi-to it refers to swords held in armouries and issued out to lower class Samurai or Ashigaru as and when needed. There are other threads here covering the subject in more detail. 5 Quote
micah Posted April 5, 2021 Author Report Posted April 5, 2021 13 hours ago, AntiquarianCat said: Hello Micah, I’m sort of confused as to why you call it a satsuma sword. If you mean the koshirae, it doesn’t look like this has the two holes you would expect from a Satsuma tsuba. It doesn’t look much like a lot of the very fine examples of Satsuma koshirae out there https://yuhindo.com/ishiguro-masayoshi-koshirae/ Did you mean you think the mounts are from the Satsuma Rebellion and that is why they appear crude? If you mean the blade, the following traits are what you could expect from Satsuma work but your sword is too out of polish for such things to be discernible. As friendly advice from one beginner to another, I’d like to say that you’re better off by starting with swords that are in decent polish. It takes collectors with a lot more experience than either of us to size up swords in poor condition and guess on if they’re worth a restoration. Better to hang on to your money for stuff you’ll like more I think. im not really a beginner been doing it for 8 years just cant read smith names but i know most things the reason the title is because most satsuma blades i have seen have been made in the same era with there mounts being the same amd never changed because like Dave said they where arsenal swords so some where made just for that so some never had diffrent koshirae and was never changed out like they used the same tsuka over and over again mine might be a old tsuka that was refitted into a arsenal handle they seem to be recycled parts from other parts of swords just thrown together Quote
AntiquarianCat Posted April 5, 2021 Report Posted April 5, 2021 Thank you Dave, that term is a great deal less confusing. To be honest, I’m fond of Satsuma Koshirae, so I was a bit disappointed when I clicked and found out the Satsuma mounts mentioned in this thread referred to jury-rigged fittings. And Micah, seeing as how the blade is so badly out of polish, maybe it wouldn’t hurt to use high quality uchiko here? It might make the hamon a bit more visible. Seeing as how there’s no signature and the nakago has been filed clean, that might be the only way to get more information. For what it’s worth I don’t think it’s a muromachi katate-uchi: the examples I’ve seen have a wider mihaba and they have sakisori. 1 Quote
micah Posted April 5, 2021 Author Report Posted April 5, 2021 2 hours ago, AntiquarianCat said: Thank you Dave, that term is a great deal less confusing. To be honest, I’m fond of Satsuma Koshirae, so I was a bit disappointed when I clicked and found out the Satsuma mounts mentioned in this thread referred to jury-rigged fittings. And Micah, seeing as how the blade is so badly out of polish, maybe it wouldn’t hurt to use high quality uchiko here? It might make the hamon a bit more visible. Seeing as how there’s no signature and the nakago has been filed clean, that might be the only way to get more information. For what it’s worth I don’t think it’s a muromachi katate-uchi: the examples I’ve seen have a wider mihaba and they have sakisori. to be fair all arsenal swords are out of polish not gonna be a pretty polsh if it was a flawed blade and ment to be used i know it has a suguha hamon alot of swords dont have signatures especially these arsenal blades the blade is curved all the way the nakago follows the sori of the blade more like koshi sori and it leans back at the habaki when mounted and the cleaning was most likely done by some one of that period it was coverd in glue most likely to make the glue stick easy like Dave said so does it does not bother me i got a fine kanbun waki next to it and it looks like a chu suguha similar to my kabun one but the hamon is basically gone from to many polishes so lost a lot of it's original mass and weight would have been wider when it was new spine is pretty thin almost tanto thin so it has lost alot of mass it has hit something hard has a bend at the last 4 inches of the blade from a diagonal strike from the look of it and has a cut on the spine but has been polished out maybe old wound on it but it is a flawed blade not trying to fix it you cant Quote
chrstphr Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 In my opinion, If the cleaning of the nakago was done several hundred years ago, it would have some patina by now even in the tsuka. I expect this cleaning has been in the past 20 years or so by someone not experienced with nihonto. No one back in the period would have a reason to clean the nakago. There isnt any point to cleaning it. Only currently do people think you should sand a sword thats several hundred years old to make it look shiny and new. I also do not think this is Koto or Muromachi. I think it is later. Not trying to bash the sword, just giving what i see from the photos. I agree you have nothing to lose opening up a window to see the hamon. Chris 1 Quote
micah Posted April 6, 2021 Author Report Posted April 6, 2021 1 hour ago, chrstphr said: In my opinion, If the cleaning of the nakago was done several hundred years ago, it would have some patina by now even in the tsuka. I expect this cleaning has been in the past 20 years or so by someone not experienced with nihonto. No one back in the period would have a reason to clean the nakago. There isnt any point to cleaning it. Only currently do people think you should sand a sword thats several hundred years old to make it look shiny and new. I also do not think this is Koto or Muromachi. I think it is later. Not trying to bash the sword, just giving what i see from the photos. I agree you have nothing to lose opening up a window to see the hamon. Chris i ment when the sword was turned into a arsenal sword about 144 so years ago they cleaned off the nakago to make the glue stick better to the handle and paper i suspect in there the sword has not been taken of in the past hunderd years im sure the glue was stuck on and no tampering until I messed with it and if this is not a old blade it has been polished alot so much in fact the hamon is almost gone and here are some other Arsenal and satsuma blades they have almost identical finish to mine i suspect it was the norm Quote
ROKUJURO Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 What glue? And where did someone use glue on a sword? 'Glue' in Japan always was resin or - in most cases - URUSHI. 1 Quote
chrstphr Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 "glueing" as you say is not a reason to remove the patina on the nakago. I suspect the glue is something someone did again not familiar with nihonto and it's more recent. Like in the past 20 years or so. Someone mucked about with this and it wasnt 100 years ago. And in Japan, they never clean the furniture, or koshirae. They love patina. Sanding a nakago in Japan wouldnt be considered 144 years ago. Its a huge no no even today. However, this is just my opinion. Chris 1 Quote
micah Posted April 6, 2021 Author Report Posted April 6, 2021 1 hour ago, chrstphr said: "glueing" as you say is not a reason to remove the patina on the nakago. I suspect the glue is something someone did again not familiar with nihonto and it's more recent. Like in the past 20 years or so. Someone mucked about with this and it wasnt 100 years ago. And in Japan, they never clean the furniture, or koshirae. They love patina. Sanding a nakago in Japan wouldnt be considered 144 years ago. Its a huge no no even today. However, this is just my opinion. Chris glue would not stick then when i removed the glue it was like that under it was some type of black tar i think modern person would use epoxi or modern glue Quote
AntiquarianCat Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 I’m not sure, I think Usagiya has examples of swords where they filled in black rust pits with red urushi. And my understanding is that those were old patches on old scars so surely they all would have fallen out if patina were ungluable. I have to agree with Chris. There are 1970s shinsakuto with more patina than the naked parts of your nakago. And I doubt glue would have kept it from repatinating in the century and a half since it’s filing. Unless Saigo Takamori was secretly importing Renaissance wax and using it as glue for filed nakagos the cleaning couldn’t have been so old and look so new. Isn’t it possible that this sword and its glued together fittings could have been done after ww2, for a tourist or something? That would explain why so little patina has regrown. Also I still think it might be worth using high quality uchiko. Maybe it’s possible the hamon isn’t gone and the reason it’s indiscernible is because the sword is just that badly out of polish. It certainly wouldn’t get it back in polish but maybe it might make the hamon a tad more visible. 1 Quote
micah Posted April 6, 2021 Author Report Posted April 6, 2021 1 hour ago, AntiquarianCat said: I’m not sure, I think Usagiya has examples of swords where they filled in black rust pits with red urushi. And my understanding is that those were old patches on old scars so surely they all would have fallen out if patina were ungluable. I have to agree with Chris. There are 1970s shinsakuto with more patina than the naked parts of your nakago. And I doubt glue would have kept it from repatinating in the century and a half since it’s filing. Unless Saigo Takamori was secretly importing Renaissance wax and using it as glue for filed nakagos the cleaning couldn’t have been so old and look so new. Isn’t it possible that this sword and its glued together fittings could have been done after ww2, for a tourist or something? That would explain why so little patina has regrown. Also I still think it might be worth using high quality uchiko. Maybe it’s possible the hamon isn’t gone and the reason it’s indiscernible is because the sword is just that badly out of polish. It certainly wouldn’t get it back in polish but maybe it might make the hamon a tad more visible. i did not say the hamon was gone i said it was almost gone im not gonna use uchiko it would ruin the patina i dont think the pictures show but the blade is more black and not really shiny in person is has a dark hue on it and cant see the scratches on the blade in person have to look really close Quote
AntiquarianCat Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 I apologize if my suggestion was poorly worded. I never suggested using uchiko on what’s left of the nakago. I thought it might be worth a try on the blade itself. They say it’s permissible to uchiko swords that are mostly or totally out of polish so long as you do it with the right methods. It helped with a sword I was told wasn’t worth a polish, I could barely see the hada asides from some patches that were more in polish and after two years of periodically using Robert Benson’s uchiko, the hada is more visible and you can even make out jinie. Of course it’s your sword so it was just a foolish suggestion on my part so don’t worry about it. If you mean the blade itself though, I haven’t heard of a Japanese blade being out of polish referred to as patina. I think that’s more of a term I have heard used with old knives and European blades. 1 Quote
micah Posted April 6, 2021 Author Report Posted April 6, 2021 1 hour ago, AntiquarianCat said: I apologize if my suggestion was poorly worded. I never suggested using uchiko on what’s left of the nakago. I thought it might be worth a try on the blade itself. They say it’s permissible to uchiko swords that are mostly or totally out of polish so long as you do it with the right methods. It helped with a sword I was told wasn’t worth a polish, I could barely see the hada asides from some patches that were more in polish and after two years of periodically using Robert Benson’s uchiko, the hada is more visible and you can even make out jinie. Of course it’s your sword so it was just a foolish suggestion on my part so don’t worry about it. If you mean the blade itself though, I haven’t heard of a Japanese blade being out of polish referred to as patina. I think that’s more of a term I have heard used with old knives and European blades. i was talikng about the blade not the nakago and all of the satsuma blades are out of polish and Arsenal blades they where for use not being pretty i showed some above just like mine blade at least and the darkening of the blade was most likely from rust Quote
AntiquarianCat Posted April 6, 2021 Report Posted April 6, 2021 I would wager that most of the soldiers participating in the rebellion brought their family blades, or used weapons seized from the arsenals so no reason to expect them to be in terrible shape. As for Arsenal weapons like Kazu-uchi-mono, there are many that despite being by smiths known to make them, and having the signatures associated with being a bundle sword, still are polished and in good shape. Arsenal weapons can look nice. Or maybe that’s just me since I’m weird and think a lot of katate-uchi, probably even some mass produced ones look nice. Quote
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