is it true that the purpose of this ceremony was to pass on specific details to do with the making of the sword to the next generation of sword makers at a time when the Japanese had no writing system of their own with which to record the intricacies of this process?
I imagine there would be some religious significance too, but could anyone confirm this?
is it true that the purpose of this ceremony was to pass on specific details to do with the making of the sword to the next generation of sword makers at a time when the Japanese had no writing system of their own with which to record the intricacies of this process?
I imagine there would be some religious significance too, but could anyone confirm this?
these people have a higher state of culture and civilization than america does. you cannot compare a nation of alien immigrant mexicans wet backs with the pure race of Japan.
Thanks for uploading! Interesting movie, as it almost seemed identical to my own. Although this one, took place in '07. I went there last year: '09 and I recognized it's place. Very interesting to experience too, as a sword collector.
i dont believe a sword holds your soul.... but i think that it SHOULD reflect your personality which is why i believe that you should make your own sword and you dont truely own it unless you made it or helped make it in someone (such as provide the design spec's or helped pick out and hammer the metal etc etc...). meaning hardly anyone (from my persepective) owns there a sword. it shouldnt be something you just pick up one day at a shop.
No. It saved their lives. It kept their souls in the material plain of existance. But I don't believe it held their souls specifically in the blade, as I said though I do believe it reflect their personality. It's why I own no weapons.
@sk8wise12 sorry you are wrong, i'm swordsman i would like to make swords but it would take time to learn, time that i spend on training how to use it. Years ago (both in europe and asia) there where separate people who did blades, handles, crossguards and pommels, scrabbards, polishers, jewelery fitting... and people who used them. It takes years of practice to do decent job in one of those fields, and to master them all you'd be 80 year old grandpa. Master your field don't try to grab them all
Uhhh I think you didn't understand the post. I understand how long it takes to truely make a good sword. Not just some cookie-cutter (hehe) B.S. I mean something you truely have an emotional and artistic claim to. Buying swords from a store isn't a very good thing, you have no real claim to it other then monetary.
@sk8wise12 i agree that buying from store is bad, you should buy them from their maker.
Making one sword isn't that time consuming, my friend makes 2-5 blades a day, and another few days on each to do fittings. It takes time to learn how to do it. If you spend that time in workshop, then you don't spend it trianind fencing. Emotional bond to sword is sorry to say but BS. Every 2-3 years i break atleast one sword, sometimes even faster, i had swords that lasted less than year.
@perdurabo1 Not really. I may not be a sword maker or anything of that caliber. All I do is sharpen blades but I do so rather well. I ask for nothing more than one of the sharpened blades in return as a kind of souvenir to remind me of the effort I put into it. Yeah it doesn't take that long (maybe 15-30 minutes depending on the sharpness the client wants) but it still means something to me regardless of how non-time consuming it may be.
is it true that the purpose of this ceremony was to pass on specific details to do with the making of the sword to the next generation of sword makers at a time when the Japanese had no writing system of their own with which to record the intricacies of this process?
I imagine there would be some religious significance too, but could anyone confirm this?
blueingreentrain 1 year ago
is it true that the purpose of this ceremony was to pass on specific details to do with the making of the sword to the next generation of sword makers at a time when the Japanese had no writing system of their own with which to record the intricacies of this process?
I imagine there would be some religious significance too, but could anyone confirm this?
blueingreentrain 1 year ago
these people have a higher state of culture and civilization than america does. you cannot compare a nation of alien immigrant mexicans wet backs with the pure race of Japan.
Rico8458 1 year ago
Thanks for uploading! Interesting movie, as it almost seemed identical to my own. Although this one, took place in '07. I went there last year: '09 and I recognized it's place. Very interesting to experience too, as a sword collector.
Nirusu87 2 years ago
Yeah it is definately a place to go and watch.
Well worth it. Glad you liked it. : )
NightUlf 2 years ago
i agree with u all
ah what a bond between the samurai and his katana :)
Utiyn001 2 years ago
my cousin has a katana he has a shinken they cost so much money but it is mad so very vell I love that sword.
shinobi300 3 years ago
How much did it cost?
toki00222 2 years ago
im not shure i think 3000 dollars ..
shinobi300 2 years ago
i couldn't agree more
Georgeydores1 3 years ago
This is why Katana is treated with such care and respect.
So it should be.
zerowildfire 3 years ago 6
i agree mate, all weapons should be treated with respect, sikhs and japanese both believe swords have their own souls
aceofhearts86 2 years ago
i dont believe a sword holds your soul.... but i think that it SHOULD reflect your personality which is why i believe that you should make your own sword and you dont truely own it unless you made it or helped make it in someone (such as provide the design spec's or helped pick out and hammer the metal etc etc...). meaning hardly anyone (from my persepective) owns there a sword. it shouldnt be something you just pick up one day at a shop.
sk8wise12 2 years ago
it dont hold your soul mate it holds its own, but i agree 100% about what you say about not really owning one unless you made it or helped make it
aceofhearts86 2 years ago
the katana holds the samurai's soul! they had only the katana as weapon and no guard..
they used the katana for attack and defence.
IT DID HOLD THEIR SOULS!!!
Utiyn001 2 years ago
No. It saved their lives. It kept their souls in the material plain of existance. But I don't believe it held their souls specifically in the blade, as I said though I do believe it reflect their personality. It's why I own no weapons.
sk8wise12 2 years ago
@sk8wise12 sorry you are wrong, i'm swordsman i would like to make swords but it would take time to learn, time that i spend on training how to use it. Years ago (both in europe and asia) there where separate people who did blades, handles, crossguards and pommels, scrabbards, polishers, jewelery fitting... and people who used them. It takes years of practice to do decent job in one of those fields, and to master them all you'd be 80 year old grandpa. Master your field don't try to grab them all
perdurabo1 1 year ago
@perdurabo1
Uhhh I think you didn't understand the post. I understand how long it takes to truely make a good sword. Not just some cookie-cutter (hehe) B.S. I mean something you truely have an emotional and artistic claim to. Buying swords from a store isn't a very good thing, you have no real claim to it other then monetary.
sk8wise12 1 year ago
@sk8wise12 i agree that buying from store is bad, you should buy them from their maker.
Making one sword isn't that time consuming, my friend makes 2-5 blades a day, and another few days on each to do fittings. It takes time to learn how to do it. If you spend that time in workshop, then you don't spend it trianind fencing. Emotional bond to sword is sorry to say but BS. Every 2-3 years i break atleast one sword, sometimes even faster, i had swords that lasted less than year.
perdurabo1 1 year ago
@perdurabo1 Not really. I may not be a sword maker or anything of that caliber. All I do is sharpen blades but I do so rather well. I ask for nothing more than one of the sharpened blades in return as a kind of souvenir to remind me of the effort I put into it. Yeah it doesn't take that long (maybe 15-30 minutes depending on the sharpness the client wants) but it still means something to me regardless of how non-time consuming it may be.
mauiboynokaoi 1 year ago