HAMA-MONO or HAMA-YUKI
There are sword mounts or sword
fittings those were made in the days after samurai age end (Meiji era)
as souvenir for foreign tourists.
Many craftsmen had lost their customer
by Samurai government disappear. Then they had found a new customer, tourists
from the West.
We often find such things, and call them "Hama-mono" or "Hama-yuki"
in slang. That means "things for Yokohama" or "going to
Yokohama". Yokohama was a harbor where many Japanese things were exported
to the West.
Hama-mono is made as one of fine
Japanese art, but no samurai spirit.
-Examples-
This kozuka/kogai is very beautiful and made by excellent skill. But the
design is strange. It has no theme, and motifs don't accord each other.
They look like samples of Japanese craftsmanship.
This kashira is made by excellent skill, but a little strange to use on
Samurai's sword. It might be used on some kind of special swords.
A tsuba made of shakudo (black copper) with an excellent work of thin relief.
But if you try to put this tsuba on koshirae, the relief on the seppa-dai
becomes a trouble to get good fit with seppa. This tsuba is not made for
putting on actual sword.
The nanako dots of base is omitted. The craftsman should have excellent skill, but this is not a serious work of him. It is made easily to attract Western people.
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