Odannrott Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 Hello you all and thank you for taking time for me. I've only been into Japanese swords for a few years and recently got a new katana from the US. It was offered as a Gendaito but I am not sure if thats correct and I would like to hear your opinion on the sword. It is signed "Seki Kanehide saku". As far as I know Kanehide was a RJT smith. However, there are no stamps on the sword. I would like to know as much as possible about it, especially if it is a real Gendaito from Kanehide and how old it is (WW2 or after the war). I hope the pictures are ok. I am looking forward to your opinions. I uploaded a video on youtube as well for better overview. Some data: Nagasa: 72.0 cm, Sori: 1.5 cm, Moto-haba: 3.1 cm. (The sword was not that expensive, so don't hold back on any bad news. I still have a lot to learn). Quote
Brian Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 My gut feel is that the nakago was scrubbed of patina and redone, and then a new mei added. Was this from an eBay seller? Quote
Leen Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 The mei looks very clean, no patina in the mei. I think I am with Brian on this one, also not dated…..Komonjo? Quote
francois2605 Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 The picture of the jihada really has the komonjo feel and doesn't look like a typical Japanese sword hada. If the sword is supposed to be from Nakata Kanehide (2 million yen and high to superior-grade gendaito), the mei doesn't match. The 2 pages from John Slough's book about Kanehide for reference. 2 other Nakata Kanehide online at the moment: * https://japanesesword.com/archived-pages/2017/9/14/star-stamp-gendaito-by-nakata-kanehide * https://yakiba.com/kanehide-nakata/ Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 As to the blade itself, I’m a really bad one to speak, but I don’t see the telltale signs of a non-traditional blade. I would lean towards traditional on this one. But I have been wrong before! Quote
David Flynn Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 Bruce, it's not about being traditional, more, did Kanehide make this? Quote
Bruno Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 It does not look like Nakata Kanehide's work, to me at least. Quote
Bryce Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 G'day Lucas, From these photos I can't tell if the blade was traditionally made or not, but I can see enough to know it wasn't made by the showa period smith Kanehide. It may be an optical illusion, but to me it looks like the munemachi and hamachi aren't aligned properly. If so this is a real red flag. Cheers, Bryce Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted October 16, 2022 Report Posted October 16, 2022 It unfortunately looks like a Komonjo piece. These are at least significantly nicer than a chinese fake. 1 Quote
lonely panet Posted October 17, 2022 Report Posted October 17, 2022 i personally dont this this piece was evan Born in Japan, let alone being from Kanehide Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted October 17, 2022 Report Posted October 17, 2022 24 minutes ago, lonely panet said: i personally dont this this piece was evan Born in Japan, let alone being from Kanehide On this side of the proverbial coin, I was initially bothered by the, almost, no taper of the nakago from top to bottom. Quote
Odannrott Posted October 17, 2022 Author Report Posted October 17, 2022 Thank you all so far. So it was right to be skeptical after all . Quote
lonely panet Posted October 19, 2022 Report Posted October 19, 2022 its more than that, the un-natueral apperance of the shinogi at the yokote line, the funny kissaki Ha and the almost flat appearnce of the JI. smells like trout Quote
SteveM Posted October 19, 2022 Report Posted October 19, 2022 Just popping in to say Kanehide lived and continued to make swords deep into the 1980s. He had a variety of signature styles. Here is one made in the year he passed away (1988). https://www.samuraishokai.jp/sword/09320.html Here is one he made in the 1970s http://sanmei.com/contents/media/S65087_S5013.bak Anyway, best to continue being skeptical for now, but be aware that there are some Kanehide swords that look rather new. 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted October 19, 2022 Report Posted October 19, 2022 6 hours ago, SteveM said: there are some Kanehide swords that look rather new. That very well may explain what we are looking at! Quote
Mark Posted October 19, 2022 Report Posted October 19, 2022 the 1970's sword linked by Steve M is dated...... it is my understanding that ALL shinsakuto blades must be dated. the example here is NOT dated. maybe i missed the provenance but without knowing i would be skeptical 2 Quote
Odannrott Posted October 20, 2022 Author Report Posted October 20, 2022 For more clarification, yes its from komonjo. So after all i've read so far online, this is most likely a gimei sword with unknown identity. Also Bryce is right with this, i checked again and they aren't aligned properly on one side of the blade (wasn't visible on the original pictures from offering). On 10/17/2022 at 1:14 AM, Bryce said: G'day Lucas, From these photos I can't tell if the blade was traditionally made or not, but I can see enough to know it wasn't made by the showa period smith Kanehide. It may be an optical illusion, but to me it looks like the munemachi and hamachi aren't aligned properly. If so this is a real red flag. Cheers, Bryce 1 2 Quote
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