Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Report Posted April 14, 2022 Hi All, I have several questions regarding the koshirae that came with the Masahiro blade I recently posted about in the Nihonto section. Please excuse my ignorance and inexperience regarding these items, so my comments are coming from a gut feel. In general, the whole package feels like a mix of put together (low quality) parts and an abused saya. My biggest overall question is at what point do collectors part something like this out vs saving it ‘as is’ as a part of the blades ‘history’? The LAST thing I would want to do is someday regret not keeping it together… but if there is no point and it is too far gone or of little consequence to matter… I’ll break this up into several posts. Any comments on the individual items or the whole ‘conservancy’ issue are appreciated. Quote
Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Author Report Posted April 14, 2022 Tsuba was described as a “shinchu tsuba formed as a chrysanthemum, partially pierce carved and finished in gold nunomezogan”. Couldn’t really find anything similar (finish-wise) on-line. Doesn’t seem well constructed or finished? Quote
Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Author Report Posted April 14, 2022 Fuchi-kashira described as “iron tsuchimeji”. Seems rather rough (rusted) and well worn. Quote
Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Author Report Posted April 14, 2022 The tsuka is 23.5cm long and feels more like a katana tsuka, however blade is 52.3cm and heavy, so maybe it is right? Not in great shape. Menuki appear to be copper and in fair shape. A kettle (tetsubin) of some sort? Quote
Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Author Report Posted April 14, 2022 You’ll remember the odd ‘knife’ in the kogatana slot I posted about before. Quote
Mark S. Posted April 14, 2022 Author Report Posted April 14, 2022 And finally, the saya. Poor condition. Quote
SteveM Posted April 14, 2022 Report Posted April 14, 2022 Your gut feeling is absolutely correct. Low quality parts, including a low quality and unloved saya. The tsuba is an unknown vintage, and possibly/probably not too much older than 100 years? Fuchi/kashira look to be oxidized rather than done with a tsuchime finish. All in all, the koshirae doesn't offer much in the way of historically interesting or aesthetically pleasing components. The split in the saya means it doesn't function well as a sword protector. So this leads to your other question, which comes up from time to time, but has a range of opinions so there is probably no consensus from the board. Personally, I feel this kind of ensemble has minimal value as an historical artifact, and almost no artistic merit. Some people feel that splitting up any ensemble is a form of vandalism. But I can't see anything in this set that informs me or educates me about the sword or its owner. So as far as this sword is concerned, don't spend too much time worrying about the keeping the integrity of the ensemble. If the sword itself is decent, and you want to keep it, get a shirasaya made for it (and set these parts to one side). Then, spend the next few months convincing yourself and your bank account, that spending even more money on making a new koshirae with nice fittings is a great idea, even though its probably (almost assuredly) a money-losing labor of love. 2 Quote
MauroP Posted April 14, 2022 Report Posted April 14, 2022 Hi Mark, I think the tsuba doesn't look so bad, it could even be a ko-kinkō piece, though unmatched to a saya with kogatana slot. 1 Quote
Mark S. Posted April 15, 2022 Author Report Posted April 15, 2022 16 hours ago, SteveM said: If the sword itself is decent, and you want to keep it, get a shirasaya made for it (and set these parts to one side). Then, spend the next few months convincing yourself and your bank account, that spending even more money on making a new koshirae with nice fittings is a great idea, even though its probably (almost assuredly) a money-losing labor of love. Made a temporary newspaper shirasaya for it because I could see no good coming from the split wood saya. Blade is a 1st generation Hojoji Tachibana Masahiro wakizashi (no papers yet but mei looks pretty close to documented examples). I’d be quite happy with a future shirasaya. No plans to build a whole koshirae for it. Bringing to Chicago show for review. 1 Quote
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