05/04/2026
Sharing the unboxing of a Tenbun period Muromachi Bizen blade by Hō-Norimitsu, from the parallel lineage of Bizen Norimitsu smiths who come from the Kozori Bizen school.
https://youtu.be/gI8mT1v29k0
NORIMITSU (法光), 8th gen., Tenbun (天文, 1532-1555), Bizen – “Bizen no Kuni-jū Osafune Hachirōbei Norimitsu saku” (備前国住長船八郎兵衛法光作), first name Hachirōbei (八郎兵衛)
Swords of Japan
Unboxing a Sue-Bizen Katana by Kozori 'Hō' Norimitsu in Koshirae with Kanteisho
04/28/2026
https://youtu.be/QzcAFjA5xak?si=Y3uD_DcgQfuGE2oB
Swords of Japan
2 likes. "Muramasa: Unboxing One of the Most Infamous Names in Japanese Swordsmithing"
04/18/2026
Unboxing an ubu zaimei Rai Kunitoshi tanto.
Swords of Japan
14 likes, 2 comments. "Unboxing an Ubu Zaimei Rai Kunitoshi Tanto | Masterwork of the Kamakura period Yamashiro Rai School"
04/17/2026
Preview of an exceptional and rare shodai Nobutaka tanto. This is the only tanto by the first generation Owari Nobutaka that I have personally seen in-hand.
NOBUTAKA (信高), 1st gen., Keichō (慶長, 1596-1615), Owari – “Nōshū Seki San´ami Kanekuni-matsuyō Hōki no Kami Fujiwara Nobutaka Bishū Nagoya ni oite rokujūsai saku” (濃州関三阿弥兼国末葉伯耆守藤原信高於尾州名護屋作六十歳, “made by Hōki no Kami Fujiwara Nobutaka at the age of 60 in Nagoya in Owari province, successor of Mino San´ami Kanekuni”), “Hōki no Kami Fujiwara Nobutaka” (伯耆守藤原信高), “Hōki no Kami Fujiwara Ason Nobutaka” (伯耆守藤原朝臣信高), real name Kawamura Saemon (河村左衛門), he was born in the sixth year of Eiroku (永禄, 1563) in Kōzuchi (上有知) in Mino province and was by his own account a successor of San´ami Kanekuni (兼国), he moved to Kiyosu (清洲) in Owari province around Tenshō 16 or 17 (天正, 1588/89) and received his honorary title Hōki no Kami, on the eleventh day of the fifth month of Tenshō 20 (1592) by the agency of the kanpaku regent Toyotomi Hidetsugu, but there is also the theory that he had already received this title back in Tenshō nine (1580) because a blade with that date supposedly exists which bears that title in the signature, anyway, it is assumed that he moved to Nagoya when the castle of the same name was finished in Keichō 15 (1610), in the ninth year of Kan´ei (寛永, 1633) he retired and entered priesthood under the nyūdō-gō Keiyū (慶遊), leaving the management of the school to his son, the 2nd generation Nobutataka, he died three years later in Kan´ei 13 (1636) at the age of 76, his blades have mostly a wide shinogi-ji, a high shinogi and an elongated kissaki, i.e. basically a Keichō-shintō-sugata, the jigane is a dense and beautifully forged itame mixed with masame and ji-nie but some works also show a standing-out hada and others in turn a shirake-utsuri, the hamon is a notare-midare or gunome-midare, rarely also a chōji or suguha, whereas he hardened in ko-nie-deki and with a wide nioiguchi, there are also some blades with ara-nie and plenty of sunagashi known, together with Sagami no Kami Masatsune (相模守政常) and Hida no Kami Ujifusa (飛騨守氏房) he was one of the so-called “Owari-sansaku” (尾張三作), the “Three Owari Masters,” jō-saku