Alan62 Posted February 19, 2007 Report Posted February 19, 2007 I was amazed by the material covering the scabbard,I thought it was some kinda printed sticker material but under a jewelers loupe it is actualy some kind of skin.I welcome any comments Thanks Quote
Alan62 Posted February 19, 2007 Author Report Posted February 19, 2007 I forgot to say I was given this today by a friend and business partner that is 52 years old.He knew I collected swords and just had it laying around and decided to let me have it He said that it belonged to his fathers and he used to get in trouble for pulling it out of Dads closet and playing with it when he was a kid. The only reason I wanted to point this out is to let yall know that it has at least 40 years of verifiable age. My business partner had made mention of the sword to me and told me about his childhood mischief before today but I just never took a look at it , but today he came by and said "Here why don't you keep it" and I said Thank You and gave him an acoustic guitar . Anyway I just wanted to add all that Again Thanks for any information or comments Quote
Brian Posted February 19, 2007 Report Posted February 19, 2007 I think the material is sharkskin (sometimes called shagreen?) and is often used on swords worldwide. Similar to same, but from a shark instead of a ray. I have a deluxe Gunto mount where the saya is covered with this. I find that sharkskin can often have tiny diamond-shapes to the nodes. Brian Quote
Alan62 Posted February 19, 2007 Author Report Posted February 19, 2007 Thank You Brian, Can you tell me anything about this type sword? Am I correct in thinking it a NCO Colony type and also the flower on the side of the hilt with the petals hanging down does that represent the Korean Colony? Any additional info would be greatly apreciated Thanks Quote
Stephen Posted February 19, 2007 Report Posted February 19, 2007 That is the Kiri (Paulownia) its was use by many Imperial households then laters for clans. Later Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi conferred it on their generals for brave and faitful service. check this web site for the mountings. it may take some diging but that half the fun. http://www.h4.dion.ne.jp/~t-ohmura/gunto_002.htm Quote
Stephen Posted February 19, 2007 Report Posted February 19, 2007 from F&G first book. page 65 Fig 30 ii The Paulownia imperials (kiri) found on flag Officers' naval swords made after 1896, and dipolmatic corps dress swords. Quote
Rich S Posted February 19, 2007 Report Posted February 19, 2007 IMHO, it is a Korean occupation sword, machine made blade. See my military swords page for an example with the pawlonia mon like yours. Rich S Quote
Alan62 Posted February 20, 2007 Author Report Posted February 20, 2007 Thank You Stephen and Rich Quote
Alan62 Posted February 20, 2007 Author Report Posted February 20, 2007 Almost forgot to ask ,Is there anything I should do to help preserve the skin on the Sacabbard? It seems to be fine but does it need to be oiled or anything like that? Thanks Again Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.