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Posted

Thank you Marcus! Many of us supported Ford and encouraged his work. He still brings joy to me and to many others who have his work. When I go into my den, I always look at the tsuba Ford made and the one he restored. One of our sword club members studied with Ford and learned to make excellent tsuba and to restore tsuba. 

Rest in peace, Ford. Your students will carry on your methods and dedication.

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Posted

An incredible tribute Marcus, the kind of tribute that any teacher would be very proud to receive from a student. I only wish I had the words in me to express what you have, but I felt everything you wrote was very relatable, the long chats filled with laughter, the philosophies of being a craftsman, the encouragement and support, these are the things I think of when I think of my friend Ford. There are but a handful of people in this world, or less, who... well you understand. Thank you Marcus. R.I.P Ford.

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Posted

I was going to start a thread dedicated to his work, but this seems to be a wonderful thread to continue that in. So I welcome everyone to share any insights into the man, as well as share the work done by him. Let's make this a true tribute to someone who dedicated his life to the works we so love.
I'll add the solitary piece I own a bit later when I take pics. Thank you Marcus for that wonderful tribute and heartfelt expression.

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Posted

I first came across Ford around 40 years ago when my wife and I started dealing in Meiji metalwork. Back then he was devoting much of his time to restoring such pieces for one of the Worlds top dealers. As such I was very surprised when he said to me….yep, send stuff and I’ll see what I can do. At that time I had no first hand experience of his skill and knowledge. Many parcels travelled between East Anglia and his home in Chippenham. Each one came back showing no signs whatsoever of the damages or of his unbelievable undetectable touch. Nothing ever look like it had ever had any problems, nothing ever looked restored. Missing inlay, dents and deformations, depatination etc etc…..all magically disappeared.
He welcomed me to his home a few times, mostly to collect finished pieces that were best not left to the postal system. Once he told me not to send something as he was wheelchair bound. I was shocked, he had never mentioned his serious health issues to me. 
We lost touch when he moved to SA but upon his return we exchanged via a few emails. I was no longer dealing.
It was sad that he was troubled by some of his experiences on this Forum, he asked me not to use it as a communication route. 
I count myself privileged that he helped me. A metalwork magician.
RIP Ford, and thank you.

 

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Posted

So lovely to see our Antipodean Comrade Justin on an arm-in-arm jaunt with Ford and Friends. "hammered" I understand in its manifold guises, having just come from a liberal lunch...

 

BaZZa.

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Posted

My favorite. A modern subject presented with age old Japanese aesthetic in a Higo style. Tokkuri. Ochoko and two drops of spilled sake, just sublime. 

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Posted

Thank you Marcus and all who have contributed to this page for a fitting tribute. I first met Ford here on this forum looking for advice on the production of bronze age swords, and I felt like he took me under his wing, and I ended up learning a lot of Japanese metalworking processes from him, even learning how to do chasing, niage and iron patina, and casting shakudo, shibuichi, and yamagane. I've been following and learning a lot from his Patreon page, which is still a wealth of information. I'm very grateful for him, and I'm grateful for those of you like Marcus and Jean who keep his work alive and help the next generation of Ford devotees, among whom I am numbered. May he be forever remembered by those he taught so generously, and may we continue to be inspired by the works of art he made us while he was here among us. Thanks Ford for all you did, you and your community will be in my prayers.

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Posted

Ford does not have a WIKIPEDIA page, but in my opinion he should now get one. Is there perhaps someone closer to him who could contact Isabella and/or gather some biographical and other data?

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Posted
On 9/1/2024 at 4:32 PM, ROKUJURO said:

Ford does not have a WIKIPEDIA page, but in my opinion he should now get one. Is there perhaps someone closer to him who could contact Isabella and/or gather some biopraphical and other data?

Hi Jean,

I have been thinking about this as well. I am going to make some inroads on this front once the funeral has past and perhaps give the family some more time to grieve.  

Regards,

Marcus

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  • 2 months later...
Posted

I suspect because some people rocked up and thought that they knew better than a guy who'd studied his craft in Japan and had been an artist and fittings maker for a long time. They didn't appreciate it when Ford gave them an opinion that they disagreed with and weren't able to refute - it probably goes back to the thread on whether or not tsuba were made using cast iron in the Edo period.

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Posted
1 hour ago, KungFooey said:

I know I'm newbie here but why would anyone downvote the two comments above about Wikipedia for a guy who's obviously highly respected and missed?

There are guys who took huge exception with the book farce that never was released, and they have sworn to do this everywhere his name is online.
Sad though. I can understand a lot of us lost some money, but most of us wrote it off as support for a great artist. But some have been very vocal and these are the ones downvoting. I can't stop that, but I won't allow any discussion or elaboration of that incident here. It is what it is.

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Posted
13 minutes ago, Brian said:

There are guys who took huge exception with the book farce that never was released, and they have sworn to do this everywhere his name is online.
Sad though. I can understand a lot of us lost some money, but most of us wrote it off as support for a great artist. But some have been very vocal and these are the ones downvoting. I can't stop that, but I won't allow any discussion or elaboration of that incident here. It is what it is.

Let bygones be bygones - the guy has passed away for heavens sake.

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  • 5 months later...
Posted

Hi everyone. I have been away from the hobby and this forum or a long time, and by accident bumped into the news that Ford had passed last year. That certainly did not do my mood any favors. I've seen his Utsushi-video so many times and often watch it when I want just to chill out and see something beautiful. While downbeat from the news, I opened my cabinet and took out one of his tsuba, an early piece. I will leave it here if someone is making a catalogue of his works, and for general appreciation. The theme is a flamingo and its wing. 

 

It feels a bit out of place just lying in my inactive collection, so if you need measurements or more photos let me know.

 

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  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Here is one of Ford’s early works from my collection. I cannot recall when I bought this from him. It’s one of the most tactile tsuba I own and has beautiful and playful subject. Its made of iron but carved as finely as it it were soft metal as was his rare talent. 
 

best regards 

 

Michael 

 

 

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Posted

Hi everyone,

I didn't know Ford, but has anyone checked in with Bella? Is she going okay? I'm not sure she is coping as well as she could be..

Barrie.

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