mareo1912 Posted April 6, 2023 Report Posted April 6, 2023 Hello Everyone, I want to share a wonderful piece that I finally had the time to photograph and add to my website. It is a beautiful Ichimonji style tachi by Mukansa smith Seto Yoshihiro. The blade was made in 1989 and won the NBTHK chairman's prize in the annual NBTHK swordsmithing competition in 1989, which was an integral part of his promotion to Mukansa in 1996. He studied for a time with Miyari Yukihira and then completed a full apprenticeship with Sumitani Masamine. Some more infos, a video and photos here on my site: https://www.tosogu.de/ichimonji-tachi Also, there is a very interesting interview with him available in the Book on Modern Japanese Swords and Swordsmiths by Kapp. Attached a small part of it, I can only recommend it as a whole, lot of insights into Yoshihiros time as apprentice, what he learned from Masamine and his forging concepts. It is the third blade by this smith I was able to see in hand and while clearly the most impressive one, all of them were beautiful! He still lives near Fukuoka today and produces Nihonto. He is currently the executive director of the Japanese Swordsmiths Association. Best, Marco 6 6 1 Quote
O koumori Posted April 6, 2023 Report Posted April 6, 2023 Marco, Truly beautiful! Thanks for sharing. Dan K Quote
francois2605 Posted April 7, 2023 Report Posted April 7, 2023 Excellent, thanks for sharing this beauty Marco I have a similar tachi by Seto Yoshihiro forged in 1995, this swordsmith is really talented. The picture below has been heavily edited to see through the hadori. 6 Quote
mareo1912 Posted April 16, 2023 Author Report Posted April 16, 2023 Thanks for your feedback guys, it really is a beauty! Love your Blade as well Francois!! 2 2 Quote
Tom Darling Posted April 16, 2023 Report Posted April 16, 2023 Pretty Pretty Little Thing, beautiful gem. Quote
MJS Posted April 23, 2023 Report Posted April 23, 2023 On 4/6/2023 at 2:50 PM, mareo1912 said: Also, there is a very interesting interview with him available in the Book on Modern Japanese Swords and Swordsmiths by Kapp. Attached a small part of it, I can only recommend it as a whole, lot of insights into Yoshihiros time as apprentice, what he learned from Masamine and his forging concepts. Beautiful Marco, and excellent photography indeed. We share the two hobbies, but I can only hope to attain the mastery that's demonstrated on your web site! The book looks interesting too. It is out of print, but it is on Ebay, among some other places. Thanks for sharing! 1 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.