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Posted

Hi,

 

This arrived this morning after I won it at an antique auction.
A late-war Shin gunto. The saya is made of wood and covered in leather. Unfortunately, the leather is in very poor condition and a large piece is missing.
A pleasant surprise, however, is the tsuba. I had seen in the auction house photos that it had a different type of tsuba, but those photos didn't show any details. I suspect the tsuba is older than the sword, perhaps a family heirloom?

Speaking of the sword itself, it was covered in a tough layer of old grease. Still quite sharp and in good condition.
It only has one original seppa, the others are leather plates.
The nakago has a showa mark. According to "leen" on this forum, the smith could have been Kanemichi, but I'd love to hear your opinion.

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Posted

Not sure about the mounts but the  blade is Ishihara Kanenao KANENAO  ( “Kanenao” (兼直), real name Ishihara Kanenao (石原金直), uses old kanji "Nao" ,  born 1908/May  registered as Seki smith !939 October 27.   Showa stamp so early war. 

 

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Posted

Thanks, Mecox! It's great that there's so much expertise here!
I'm pleasantly surprised; I thought the blade, like the mount, would have been produced late in the war.

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Posted

Curious why you think the fittings are late war?  I have 26 of his blades on file, and 4 of them were in civil fittings refitted for the war.  It doesn't get talked about very often, but there were plenty of swords made during the war that were sold and fitted in the civilian market.  Then, they found their way into the war effort and had the military refit, in varying degrees.

 

I admit that haikan is really crude.  Is that what seems late war?

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Posted
38 minutes ago, Bruce Pennington said:

Curious why you think the fittings are late war?  I have 26 of his blades on file, and 4 of them were in civil fittings refitted for the war.  It doesn't get talked about very often, but there were plenty of swords made during the war that were sold and fitted in the civilian market.  Then, they found their way into the war effort and had the military refit, in varying degrees.

 

I admit that haikan is really crude.  Is that what seems late war?

Actually, it was the simple, undecorated kabuto-gane and fuchi combined with the leather-covered wooden saya. All of this made me think it was late war.

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Posted

Yes, several things together can point to war fittings.  Can’t see the kabutogane very well in your first photo. But if it’s plain, I certainly would agree with you.

 

With the earlier date of the blade, then, it might have spent most of the war in a civilian home and later donated to the war. Or it might simply have just been re-fitted at some point due to damage.

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