Beautiful Japanese Forge and Horse Stable, realy detailed with fire wheels, hamers, horses, sword ...
* 10x28m
* Prim only 80 all included
* Horse ANIMATES! Eye blinks, Ear twitches, Tail wags, Feet stomps, with Sounds
* Forge on/off and access control
VERY HIGHLY DETAILED !
Traditionaly the forge in Japan was used for:
Japanese sword construction was the labour-intensive bladesmithing process developed in Japan for forging katana, wakizashi, tanto and other Japanese blades.
Katana and wakizashi were often forged with different profiles, different blade thicknesses, and varying amounts of grind. Wakizashi were not simply scaled-down katana; they were often forged in hira-zukuri or other such forms which were very rare on katana.
A daishō is a pair of swords; a wakizashi for close quarters combat, and a katana for outdoor fighting. These were not always forged together. If a samurai was able to afford a daishō, it was often composed of whichever two swords could be conveniently acquired, sometimes by different smiths and in different styles. Even when a daishō contained a pair of blades by the same smith, they were not always forged as a pair or mounted as one. Daishō made as a pair, mounted as a pair, and owned/worn as a pair, are therefore uncommon and considered highly valuable, especially if they still retain their original mountings (as opposed to later mountings, even if the later mounts are made as a pair).
Authentic Japanese swords are fairly uncommon today, although genuine antiques can be acquired at significant expense. Modern katana and wakizashi are only made by the few licenced practitioners that still make these crafted weapons today, and even the "type 98 katanas" of World War II are rare.
In Japanese, the scabbard for a katana is referred to as a saya, and the handguard piece, often intricately designed as an individual work of art — especially in later years of the Edo period — was called the tsuba. Other aspects of the mountings (koshirae), such as the menuki (decorative grip swells), habaki (blade collar and scabbard wedge), fuchi and kashira (handle collar and cap), kozuka (small utility knife handle), kogai (decorative skewer-like implement), saya lacquer, and tsuka-ito (professional handle wrap, also named emaki), received similar levels of artistry.
Sourses wikipedia
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