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Posted
2 hours ago, Spartancrest said:

An inlay design to add to your group of images - the birds face right and left "outward" to the rim....

Yes Dale,

I think so, too. But the pictured birds are probably not KARIGANE but CHIDORI?

Posted

Actually, I really love that depiction of birds..likely geese. It is so "modern" that the depiction that way can only come from a nation that sees images depicted in bonji.
A very futuristic depiction of a bird seen through an artist's eyes :-)

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Posted

:dunno:

I thought that these were CHIDORI. They have a very different flight pattern compared to KARIGARE. This depiction always expressed the erratic flight - often in large flocks - of plovers in an appropriate way for me.

But that is just my interpretation.

48782590607_b066c1e4fb_o.jpg?width=600&height=1200

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Posted

The examples I provided are all from papered tsuba, and all NBTHK papers reported the subjects as karigane. The stylized birds with "twisted body' are reported as 結雁金  - musubikarigane.

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Posted

Musubi Karigane (結び雁金) is a traditional Japanese family crest (kamon) featuring a stylized wild goose whose wings are knotted or looped into a circle. It symbolizes "a bird that carries good luck and good news" and is closely associated with SAMURAI families, most notably the SANADA clan. It represents loyalty and is a variation of the Karigane (wild goose) motif. 

Key details about Musubi Karigane:
Design & symbolism: It features a kari (wild goose), a migratory bird often linked to autumn. The bird is designed with its face facing left and its wings deformed/knotted into a circle.

Samurai Crest: This crest was used by the Shinano-Sanada clan, as well as families like the Umino and Inoue. It was frequently used for armor, sword mountings (TSUBA), and other samurai gear.

Variations: Often stylized as Shiri-awase Mitsu-musubi Karigane, where three knotted geese are arranged in a circle.

Modern Usage: It is still recognized as a classic design in Japanese traditional arts, sometimes used on clothing or items related to Japanese history.

Taken from the internet

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Posted (edited)

There must been an old Chinese story about binding slips of paper with messages into the feathers of birds.
Thus musubi-karigane are bearer of good news and at least good luck as Jean mentioned.

 

There was a thread on this motif some years ago:

 

Edited by FlorianB
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Posted
On 4/1/2026 at 4:31 AM, MauroP said:

There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent. [Mao Zedong]


Maybe the pieces in hand would narrow down a decision? Nope! It isn't science, it's a kind of kult. The experts don't consent even on the kind of birds... (clearly karigane, not chidori, IMHO).

 

I understood #1, #2, and eventually #3 after another look to better perceive the 3-D and features. Leave final judgement till I had it in hand, or at least the room.

Personally, I don't feel #4 is correct,

and #5 I would have gone with Tosa Myochin unless something felt very different in hand.

 

I think of this as a very popular Tensho 天正 era suggestive image.  [I wish Ford were still here to argue with me about it.]

You are going to see lots of interpretations from all over Japan, and the 3-D of the tsuba and working matter a lot. 

 

2-D  Black n White images are challenging.

I sometimes wonder about the accuracy of old attributions done by mail correspondence with black n white photos. 

Especially with a design like this.

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Posted (edited)

I get the impression that the attributions are based solely on gut feeling.

Yes, there are proofs presented: books and papers.

But some people with knowledge and experience doubt these and state another opinion. 
Who’s right?

 

What I'm missing here is an explanation of which detail point to one school or another.

 

I'm thinking about for example the width of the bars, angles, shapes and proportions of the elements, the proportions of the elements to each other, composition, kebori and so on.

These are things that can also be seen in pictures, and I'm ignoring details like tsuchime, tekkotsu, insides, and so forth, for which I would need to have the piece in my hand.

 

Otherwise, it will remain just a „clash of opinions“ from which no one can really learn.

 

Edited by FlorianB
Posted

Sorry, to be a pain in the neck, but there was no reaction on my request for explanation of the ID-challenge-outcome, so at least I tried to write one by myself (concerning the initial three Tsuba based on the given attribution):

 

image.png.8fd6c5cda9b6a5dd01449095b0a5c14d.thumb.png.e4fdf5c00a7a50f7deaa13f8e6a745fa.png


„These three Tsuba with similar motif were made probably early Edo or Genroku/middle Edo period when the design came into fashion and was copied and varied by different schools/artists.

 

The first seems to be the oldest because of it's surface, it is not as perfect as the others and the outer rim is plain while later variations show a kiku-gata. The rim itself seems in comparison a little bit meaty. The elements are still inside the rim, the upper parts of the slim daki-myoga fit into the inner bends. I presume the spikes in the bars left and right cite the wings of the birds what got lost on the others. The extraordinary form of the hitsu-ana looks like what we find in the Higo schools.  So early Hayashi seems to be a good choice as inventor (?) of this design.

 

The second one show more contrast in the width of the bars, the birds for example are very thin. That leads to Akasaka (probably 4th or a later generation with Higo-influence) which design often display distinct differences in thickness. The somewhat rustic appearance with imperfection in the elements and the different sizes of the hitsu-ana support this. The typical shape of birds with wings tending to be circles resemble Owari and differ somewhat from the roundness of the outer semicircles.

 

The last one seems to be a perfection of the original design with polished plain surface and elaborately worked. The rim is like the first one stout, but sophisticated with slightly exaggerated dents. The birds have similarities to the first one and their shape echoes the curves at the edge. The daki-myoga are well done not just with kebori like the others but slightly niku-bori, too. The upper ends are cleverly integrated in the rim. This is similar on the second one but there the ends curve a little bit uncontrolled into the inside.

All in all the third one gives a very harmonious impression known from Higo-Tsuba so Nishigaki seems a good choice.“

 

 

Because of the lack of my knowledge I apologize for errors in the argumentation and conclusions (maybe these lines are absolute nonsense at all) but I hope to make clear what was the idea. 
Certainly there mustn’t be such a rigmarole like mine, but it would be helpful at least simply pointing out important particulars to justify an assignment and to be remembered next time.

 

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Posted
On 4/4/2026 at 5:36 AM, FlorianB said:

I get the impression that the attributions are based solely on gut feeling.

Yes, there are proofs presented: books and papers.

But some people with knowledge and experience doubt these and state another opinion. 
Who’s right?

 

What I'm missing here is an explanation of which detail point to one school or another.

Most attributions are based on a gut feeling... most papers are not judged by jury but by a single member, then the paper gets signed off at the end. Most of these judgements seem to be done in minutes, without any sort of diligence or consultation to databases of any kind (which is why the NBTHK frequently contradicts itself when the same tsuba gets re-submitted for shinsa)

 

Proofs?! There are hardly any at all for anything that is unsigned from the pre-Edo and early Edo periods.

Old books, and papers are just a loose guideline... and because of the author's own lack of certainty, they deliver plenty of opportunity to muddy the waters for current collectors who want to "know what they have". Some of these attributions have done more harm than good over time.


It's exactly what @FlorianB proceeded to do, that we need more of...

That's precisely the the type of thing we all need to be doing (and posting :thumbsup:) if "we" as a collective hope to get to something "better" than the vapid system we have now.

...or we can just keep flouting the papers people buy rather than the tsuba themselves.

Not that I'm saying you are doing that Florian, but there are a ton of people who do... it is a money making machine after all, if you are lucky enough to get the "more valuable" school attribution in the lottery that is the current papering system). 

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Posted

About these specific tsuba:

 

I posted these three tsuba in particular in the hopes of gleaning some input from some other eyes besides mine and the papers and/ore attributions they have (which I generally do not trust, especially when “alarm bells” start going off in my head when I see what they are labeled as). I didn’t post these thinking I know the answer, not at all. This was “crowdsourcing” with the hopes of generating discussion.

 

These are not common tsuba at all… sure there are plenty of cloud and geese tsuba out there, but this is a pretty specific variation on the overall theme.

At first these tsuba all jumped out at me as being Higo tsuba because of the hitsu-ana shape, which is quite particular to them and is often a key point to identifying one of their tsuba.

 

I was taken aback with the ko-Akasaka papers on the second one, but there is a distinct shift in the size of the hitsu-ana and the fineness of the chiseled karigane, and the relative proportions of the sukashi thicknesses… so I could see it as being something other than Higo.

Until this point, I was unaware of Akasaka smiths doing Higo style hitsu-ana, I thought they typically stuck to their own shapes.

Higo did have a strong influence on Akasaka afterall… something I sometimes see some people viewing the other way around… but I have always viewed it as Higo being the influence on Akasaka.  

 

I’d like to dig into the tegane-ato around the nakago-ana to see if I can dig up some similarities with other Akasaka smiths and Higo smiths… more evidence to gather to help build a more specific case for each or maybe keep the door open... time will tell.

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Posted

About “mass production” and crossover between schools:

 

I'm going to start most recent and head back in time...

From my personal research over the years, true mass production of the generic rote kind, really seems to have kicked into gear around 1700, mid-Edo period. There were lots of sociological, economic and technological shifts around that time that facilitated that.

 

More rampant crossover between schools and smiths seems to have kicked in around the mid-1600s (after the establishment of Edo as a new capital city and the "sankin-kotai" which was the forced pilgrimage and residency of daimyo and their entourage of 100s-1000s of attendants including craftsman, every other year. That all started in 1635 but was expanded to include more daimyo as of 1642. So that's when many craftsmen from different schools were all in the same place at the same time, for extended periods of time and sharing ideas and techniques with one another.

 

From my personal comparative analysis of tsuba from the same maker (of known smiths, with a known mei), from the Momoyama to early Edo period, there seems to have been more of an "exploration of a theme" in the creation of multiple variations by one smith, but they did not seem to make rote copies of any specific design (maybe some did once in a while, but I don’t have any examples of that yet).

Successors in a school lineage do revisit certain themes from their predecessor/s but they seem to put their own little twist on the design, perhaps to distinguish their work from others and put their personal "stamp" on it.

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Posted

About “advancement of knowledge” in the field:

 

People like Mitsuru Ito and Eckhard Kremers who have published books on specific collections of tsuba from particular smiths in a more analytical manner rather than just producing a picture book of accumulated tsuba from a particular school with no real analysis included.

 

Markus Sesko of course needs to be mentioned because of his relentless efforts in translating Japanese texts, and the many years of him posting his blogs that frequently revolved around comparative analysis of small groups of similarly themed tsuba, sometimes by the same smith, and sometimes by different smiths. I always learned something whenever I read his posts.

 

And then there's Steve Waszak with his years of dedication to Yamakichibei and Hoan tsuba... with a definitive book on the subject sure to come sometime in the future, which I hope to play some part in as I have also been diving deep into Yamakichibei, and separating out types of acid etched tsuba that often get mislabeled as Hoan.

 

I have also been diving deep into all things “Owari-related”, trying to sort out the mess that is Kanayama, Ohno, Owari, and Ko-Akasaka (since they clearly had Owari roots), and trying to associate these with approximate time periods, trying to tie it all to cultural and artistic trends at various points in time. 

 

I apologize if I have left out any other publishers and bloggers from the list (like the “Zenzai blog” by Keisuke Nakamura, now that I think about it… he does this too, and I’m a big fan of what he puts together)

 

Then there’s also some thoughtful insights and sharing of information on sites like this of course! At least this forum allows for the potential for some kind of proper, positive discussion. :thumbsup:

 

And just as an example, I realized I had two tsuba of clear Owari lineage, but that were also obviously divergent from the typical Owari tsuba. In comparing them, I realized they were made by the same smith who has yet to be described or named in some way. After posting the pair and pointing it out online, it tuned out that Eckhard Kremers had realized the same thing about this smith when looking at specific tsuba published by Sasano.

Then he and I spurred each other on to do a deep dive into other publications and accumulated image banks, and we found a bunch more by the same smith. He has produced some extraordinary, unique designs that show a lot more "movement" compared to other Owari tsuba. His tsuba have gotten a variety of attributions from different sources, but as soon as you line them up, they are clearly all done by one smith.

 

It's the "gut feeling" mislabeling under the current system that I think (hope?) can and should be course corrected over time, by doing comparative analysis in exactly this way….

 

I have also identified several other groupings of tsuba that I think point to the work of individuals smiths, rather than a broad label like "Owari" or one of the other Owari-linked groupings I mentioned above. Owari was after all, a significantly large geographic area with so many smiths with different styles over the course of the 1500s and 1600s.   

 

Anyway, It’s doable, but more people need to have these thoughts in mind when they are looking at examples and gathering up images of tsuba that allow for comparison (hopefully including some oblique and side views, and not just straight on black and white images!)

 

Blah blah blah… when will this guy shut up… sheesh? ;-)

I apologize for blathering, I will stop now 

 

Oh and no, I am not just presuming to throw my name in with all those that I mentioned above, out of some sort of inflated self-worth. 

But I'm putting in the effort to gather evidence, and trying to make sense of it all with an open mind and a critical view... which is what I share in common with all those I mentioned above. 

I hope to put together some kind of publication one day, but for now, I'm still gathering information and examples, and enjoying the obsession.

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