Hi Guys, here is an interesting Katana that is in rough shape. Would this be something that could or should be cleaned by an expert?
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Need more photos of blade for damage and possible flaws. But I would start by wiping the blade down with denatured alcohol and a soft cloth, alot of that stuff will probably come off doing that. Then you can see under the grime! Wipe the tang down but do not aggressively clean it. How long is the blade from the tip to the notch in spine where the habaki stops just forward of the tsuba?
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Tang:
播州住藤原勝氏
Banshū jū Fujiwara Katsu'uji
Banshū [Harima] Resident Fujiwara Katsu'uji
7th smith listed from the bottom on p. 212 -- Kanbun era (1661-1673), worked in Harima (aka Banshū) Prefecture and Ōsaka.
Katsuuji
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Koiguchi:
濵堅直随 (花押)
Hamagata Naozui (kao)
[new research results: Hamano Naoyuki]
I found mention of him on a Japanese auction site, but no kana-reading of how to pronounce it -- so I'm taking my own *guess* at his name. And the obsolete kanji is used ... I could only get results when I replaced it with 濱. The auction site stated the piece was from the end of the Edo period.
That bit within the parentheses is called a "kao" and is a type of personal signature.
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Is this the same sword? It has the same signature (but rustier tang) and the koiguchi looks to be the same:
https://webcache.googleusercontent.c...&ct=clnk&gl=usAttached FilesLast edited by GHP; 08-07-2018, 10:58 AM.
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I found better results while clicking on a result using modern kanji: 浜野直随
His name is given as
浜野直随
Hamano Naoyuki
All these kanji are pronounced "hama" and all mean beach; seacoast; seashore:
浜, 濵, 濱
For comparison -- old/new:
濵堅直随
浜野直随
Using the modern kanji I did a google search and got LOTS of results. Many write-ups use 浜野直随 but if you look at the actual carved signatures, you'll see 濵堅直随.
See p. p. 155 for Hamano Naoyuki's history.
--Guy
Last edited by GHP; 08-07-2018, 11:02 AM.
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If it were mine, and free of fatal flaws, I'd contact Moses Becerra in Miami for an appraisal. He's a Japanese trained polisher on par with Robert Benson in Hawaii. Given your stated location Moses would be easier to deal with. Here is a link to his web site. I've had several swords polished by Moses. Each was a thing of beauty when finished and he's trustworthy and honest.
https://nihontoantiques.com/
Regards,
Stu
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