Spartancrest Posted April 11 Author Report Posted April 11 Bruno, yes some nice pieces, I discovered these when I was doing research on the Tadamasa Hayashi collection. Hayashi donated several of his pieces to the Guimet Museum back in 1894 - I am not sure what happened to the bulk of his collection, did it go to the Louvre or were they auctioned off? 1 Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 12 Author Report Posted April 12 https://www.slam.org/collection/objects/8677/ - can someone close to Saint Louis lend the Museum a tape measure please. Just doing some basic image comparison the height [if indeed it is 44 mm] when compared to the width shows a difference of about the rim thickness - at a guess 3 mm? I don't see the guard being 44 mm in height to start with, it is much larger than for a tanto wouldn't you say? I don't think we can trust many of the sizes given by this museum. I look forward to seeing what the museum has to say - Dimensions 1 3/4 x 1 1/8 x 1/8 in. (4.4 x 2.9 x 0.3 cm) 1 Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 16 Author Report Posted April 16 This is the Museum that just keeps giving and giving https://www.slam.org/collection/objects/37862/ Wow the sword must have been enormous if the guard is 29 inches across! Dimensions 29 x 3/16 x 29 in. (73.6 x 0.5 x 73.6 cm) weight: 3.5 oz. (0.1 kg) Quote
Mark Posted April 16 Report Posted April 16 a typo or mistake. probably 2.9" not 29... look at the weight and picture Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 16 Author Report Posted April 16 56 minutes ago, Mark said: a typo or mistake. Twice the mistake as the cm are wrong as well - they slipped a decimal point. The museum has a few badly out of whack dimensions and shows far too many images ura side only. It is a relatively big collection and mistakes are bound to happen but shouldn't a conscientious museum take corrections onboard? Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 18 Author Report Posted April 18 https://www.slam.org/collection/objects/37977/ An oval iris sukashi - the dimensions don't add up. From time to time in the collection measurements change orientation from Height x Width x Thickness - to H. x T. x W. Weight is never given accurately in grams Dimensions 3 1/16 x 2 1/4 x 3 1/16 in. (7.8 x 5.7 x 7.8 cm) weight: 3.2 oz. (0.1 kg) Quote
Spartancrest Posted July 3 Author Report Posted July 3 A museum collection of 474 tsuba - but only useful if you are blind! https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/search/results?query=tsuba After all, why have a collection where only two have images? 1 Quote
Scogg Posted July 3 Report Posted July 3 I do enjoy that first one! -Sam From the museum's website description: "Sword fitting. Tsuba. Sentokudo. Squarish. A wolf seated on the ground among reeds, gold and silver zogan, turning round and baying at the moon, silver, among clouds. The wolf's teeth beautifully cut in gold. On the other side a kasa lying on the grass all gold zogan. Signature: Ichiiriuku Hisamitsu. Gold, silver, height, whole, 8.4 cm, width, whole, 7.5 cm. Japanese." https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/image/media-661628556 1 1 Quote
goo Posted July 5 Report Posted July 5 That wolf must have been James Cameron's inspiration for the ones on Avatar's home world of Pandora. 1 Quote
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