Re: [solved, thx] Please Help Identifying Stone Quality
Posted: Sat May 21, 2016 5:33 am
How much was everything? could you post a picture of the board? The stones look wonderful... where do you find this kind of offers? 
Life in 19x19. Go, Weiqi, Baduk... Thats the life.
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I think the first two characters are 銘木, pronounced meiboku. If you do a google search you can see that it is a particularly good type of wood, for example here is an image search.EdLee wrote: Right-most column:
- 2nd character: 50% chance 木 (ki; wood), 50% chance 本 (hon; as in honte; Honda; proper/authentic/original ).
- 6th character: 99% chance 物 (mono; thing -- likely in combination with the 5th character ).
thxEdLee wrote:Congrats.
No, a few years ago I did another lucky heist:Is this your first ever slate & shell set ?
You already know meanwhile: the original purchase was ~10 yrs ago from Kiseido, and I only recently recently purchased stones, board, and a book as “used” (i.e. used once for re-playing a pro game ten years ago, from somebody who has finally (and sadly) given up playing Go after not playing for this long time. This person actually had played in their company’s Go club for a while but apparently couldn’t stand the pain of everybody being stronger than them (which frustration I can well understand). I guess if I lived AND were closer to that person, I’d then try to convince them to take it up again, just by playing with them.Is this your first experience with Mr. Kuroki ?
LOL, prolly like my own handwriting which has degraded even more since I began using computersthe calligraphy on your Go bowls box is "medium" free style
andGo_Japan wrote:On the right of the first image, it is hard to read the calligraphy for me on the right side. The signature also on the left bottom is very difficult. I can only read the big text in the center, which says, "Go Bowl" or "go ke" in Japanese.
Will these somewhat modified images help?Go_Japan wrote:[..] I am asking a friend to see if they can read it as well, since this is difficult to read even for Japanese people. Unless you know what it is in advance, calligraphy can be very hard to read.
edit: if you could get a close up of the Red stamp, it might be easier to read than the freehand Kanji.
tj86430 wrote:With such nice stones you really need to have an equally nice kaya board.
/me faints. Maybe I should bring bowls and stones to the bank for them to put it into their vault so that I have something for my old days. But kidding aside, I’m almost shocked to read all this … Yuki grade, so-and-so valuable … I almost feel bad about heaping up such values while being such a measly player, and I wonder whether the former owner was aware of all this … and how many much better players, gifted young players, just play with cheap material, and then to think that I could as well have donated the money to some good cause …Go_Japan wrote:Indeed. A new set of size 33 yuki stones will be over 55,000 yen these days.tj86430 wrote:With such nice stones you really need to have an equally nice kaya board.
I cannot talk about that without being embarrassed for several reasons, and you wouldn’t want to embarrass me, therefore you didn't ask that question, out of courtesyNestor wrote:How much was everything?
pls see above link to the imgur album, but the photos are really bad (like in: VERY bad).could you post a picture of the board?
Well, somebody advertised the stones, the board, and a few books as a bundle for a friend of theirs, in the German Go forum. (see above for a little more about this.)The stones look wonderful... where do you find this kind of offers?
Thank you, “meiboku” is nice to know. I also looked up “Keyaki” on the Wikipedia, and it says it is “Zelkova serrata” (and since it also says that this tree is often grown as Bonsai, I have promptly ordered a few seeds for experimentingGo_Japan wrote:I think the first two characters are 銘木, pronounced meiboku. If you do a google search you can see that it is a particularly good type of wood, for example here is an image search.
Bonobo wrote:With such nice stones you really need to have an equally nice kaya board.
Will these somewhat modified images help?Bonobo wrote: edit: if you could get a close up of the Red stamp, it might be easier to read than the freehand Kanji.
Uhm <scratches head>Go_Japan wrote:What makes you think it is shin-kaya?
No, but as said, it has only been used once, and only for re-playing a pro game … but well, there actually is one tiny little dent (perhaps 2mm long and 1 mm wide) outside the playing area, between the edge of the board and the edge of the grid, but I’m quite sure that this is not from playing and may have happened during some transport or something. If you visit the imgur album I linked to in the other comment, there is a photo of a textile jacket (sleeve? envelope?) for the board, maybe you can recognize it, I think it may be a certain vendor who sells these together with their boards?Does it have dents in it from playing on the board?
Mh… I know close to nothing about all this, and you definitely know a LOT more, so I’ll just take your word and go <wow> and again <wow> …I have been looking at a lot of boards to purchase recently and I haven't seen a shin-kaya board made from several pieces. Perhaps I am just looking at the more expensive boards, but shin-kaya I have seen is always just one piece of wood. OTOH, Kaya is often made from several pieces because it is much more expensive. So, I am just wondering, maybe your board is kaya.
Ah well, never mind, you have helped me SO MUCH already, thank you!Go_Japan wrote:I think it says this on the right side. The left bottom is still not legible for us.
awesome … just a few weeks ago somebody posted a video of the process, here or in one of the Go groups on FB or in the Go community on G+, and I watched it open-mouthed, wishing I had learned woodworking instead of acquiring a flat butt while being the lonely ape in front of the computer … especially the repeated waxing and polishing of the bowls at the end, wow … I believe that every real good artisan also is sort of a philosopher … at least I personally respect them as if it were so.It is like saying, it is "special wood, high quality hikimono". Hikimono is a special process for making wood. Like this: http://blogimg.goo.ne.jp/user_image/49/ ... c4c658.jpg
銘木高級挽物
Yes, this makes a lot of sense.Go_Japan wrote:銘木高級挽物
Yea, to each his own; but this seems a little strange.This person actually had played in their company’s Go club for a while but apparently couldn’t stand the pain of everybody being stronger than them
It is hard to tell really. I thought if you saw a bunch of very small dents in the board, it would be obviously shin-kaya. But if it doesn't have them, it doesn't mean that it is kaya, I think.Bonobo wrote:Uhm <scratches head>Go_Japan wrote:What makes you think it is shin-kaya?
TBH, I have no idea … I just thought it would be “too good to be true”.