![]() |
Nihonto Question on Re-Tempering
Greetings folks,
I know that this is not my usual area of expertise nor comment, but I do have a question concerning nihonto: Is it typical for a Japanese katana or wakasashi blade to be re-tempered? If so, why? Would it lower the value if it were re-tempered? |
It is not typical, but not uncommon for a katana or wakizashi to be re-tempered if it was burned in a fire or had the kissaki broken
It needs to be done by an expert. Please don't try it yourself. It drastically changes the curvature and also will have a different hamon from what the original swordmaker did. Yes, Re-tempering makes the blade far less valuable in the Nihonto market. Any serious collector can spot a re-tempered (saiha) blade quite easily. Rich http://www.japaneseswordindex.com/nihonto.htm |
I was hoping you would chime in Rich. Thank you. And no I wouldn't dare do such a thing since I am not a swordsmith.
|
In nihonto the tempering defines the blade and it is an essential part of it.
I would say that Rick put it quite mildly, but from the point of view of a nihonto collector, a re-tempered blade is worthless. |
Domo arigato to you both.
This is what I figured but was not sure. That is why I am so very careful and know what I want and don't want to throw away my money on re-tempers, blades with kizus, blades that need massive amounts of polish, etc. |
Quote:
However, this doesn't mean the blade has no value from historical or ethnographic point of view. Now, it is our choice how much weight do we place on nihonto criteria/standards and how much on ethnographic criteria/standards. However, if one wants to be on the safe side, one would only aquire NTBHK papered blades from reputed nihonto dealers... preferably directly from Japan. |
I thought true traditional nihonto was forbidden to leave Japan. :confused:
|
Quote:
Otherwise, swords are free to come and go, though ownership in Japan is subject to registration requirements, and export requires permit and paperwork . I was informed by a sword dealer and polisher that this tight regulation of weapons goes all the way back to rules laid down during the postwar US occupation. |
You might find this interesting.... http://www.nihontocraft.com/Yakinaoshi.html
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:27 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Posts are regarded as being copyrighted by their authors and the act of posting material is deemed to be a granting of an irrevocable nonexclusive license for display here.