Lexvdjagt Posted Tuesday at 08:01 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 08:01 PM Dear NMB, I am offering this Nio Kiyoharu katana for sale with NBTHK papers. Katana Nio Kiyoharu, Dated August, 2nd Year of Tenshō (1574) Blade Length: 71.5 cm (approx. 2 shaku 3 sun 6 bu minus) Curvature (Sori): 1.8 cm Width at Base (Moto-haba): 3.20 cm Width at Tip (Saki-haba): 1.90 cm Thickness at Base (Moto-kasane): 0.75 cm Thickness at Tip (Saki-kasane): 0.48 cm Mekugi-ana (peg holes): 1 Description: Shinogi-zukuri, with a high shinogi and low iori-mune. It has a medium-length kissaki. The kitae is nicely formed ko-itame mixed with itame and some masame hada, with strong flowing patterns in places and a clearly visible jigane. The hamon (temper line) is suguha-chō, with small nie and some nice hataraki. The boshi has a slight notare style and is covered with nie. The nakago is ubu. It comes with a large copper habaki plated with gold. Has a shirasaya and a sword bag. Price: €2500 Free shipping inside EU Shipping outside EU available for a small additional cost (€20–40) Shipped with UPS Express (or different courier), fully insured to full value Located in the Netherlands – pickup possible Any questions are always welcome! There will be a donation made to NMB if the blade is sold through NMB. 2 Quote
2devnul Posted yesterday at 06:45 AM Report Posted yesterday at 06:45 AM Hi, Looks nice, price is a bargain, but.... Test cut? Quote
Marius Posted yesterday at 08:20 AM Report Posted yesterday at 08:20 AM A great opportunity for those who can accept the simple fact that old swords sometimes just have coarse grain, because they were made as weapons. Consider: Kotō (Muromachi) Ubu, signed and dated Long Healthy (look at the wide motohaba and thick kasane!) Reputable school NBTHK paper Also, the pictures aren’t that good (sorry Lex) and I am certain there is loads to be enjoyed in this sword. All in all, at this price it’s a bargain. Someone take advantage! 2 Quote
Lexvdjagt Posted yesterday at 08:52 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 08:52 AM 2 hours ago, 2devnul said: Hi, Looks nice, price is a bargain, but.... Test cut? Hello Adam, These areas are some scratches that are visible on the blade when photographing it in my current method. I do not observe them in hand. The blade has not been polished for a while, so some scratches like these are normal. and thank you @Marius for the feedback! I am currently still figuring the photographing part out. The PDF that is available on the forum was very helpful, but I will simply need to put some more time into making a dedicated setup. I would ideally like to be able to make photographs of Japanese dealer level. Thank you for your input! greetings, Lex Quote
2devnul Posted yesterday at 09:59 AM Report Posted yesterday at 09:59 AM Gentlemen, I completely understand and I'm not saying these scratches should impact blade quality or price. It really looks like a very nice deal. I would buy it personally if I could just afford it. What is interesting for me is the fact that scratches look like typical Temeshigiri 'flaw'. I was just wondering who and why (can't understand why people would use antique blades for that) used it for cutting. Quote
Lexvdjagt Posted yesterday at 10:06 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 10:06 AM 1 minute ago, 2devnul said: Gentlemen, I completely understand and I'm not saying these scratches should impact blade quality or price. It really looks like a very nice deal. I would buy it personally if I could just afford it. What is interesting for me is the fact that scratches look like typical Temeshigiri 'flaw'. I was just wondering who and why (can't understand why people would use antique blades for that) used it for cutting. I have had a Chiyozuru katana in the past that had some minor scratches in the same way as well but more prominent (I am certain it was used for cutting something, likely by a westerner). Also some slight damage on the Hamon and cutting edge which doesn’t seem to be the case with this sword. It could have been used or iaido in Japan which is more common than you’d think. A lot of sellers still sell blades from the Muromachi period as Iaido blades. Quote
Rawa Posted yesterday at 12:37 PM Report Posted yesterday at 12:37 PM Pappered long ubu koto blade. What not to like here? I wrote that is long? One mekugi-ana. Dated, no signs of retempering and packed boshi. Oh and yeah he have tendency to give photos with over-sharpened details. But its better for buyer. Good deal for eu denizens. Photo of random part chiyozuru. Quote
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