Sonobe Yoshihide (園部芳英) was the second-generation head of the Sonobe house of metalworkers, succeeding his father Yoshitsugu, who had founded the line after training under Tanaka Yoshiaki (田中芳章), a master in the Goto lineage. Through the Tanaka connection, the Sonobe family was permitted to associate with the Goto main house, and Yoshihide is considered to have received direct guidance from Goto Mitsuaki (後藤光乗), the sixteenth hereditary master. Known by the personal name Dengoro and later adopting his father's common-use name Denzo, Yoshihide worked at the foot of 'ei- in Ueno — a location he recorded on certain works with the poetic inscription "Tendai sanroku" (天台山麓). He died in Genji 1 (1864) at the age of fifty-nine, leaving sons Yoshitada and Yoshiharu to continue the family tradition.
Yoshihide's oeuvre demonstrates a thorough command of Goto-school carving methods inherited through the Tanaka master-line, executed with what the characterizes as "dignified and meticulously accomplished carving technique." His standard idiom employs grounds enriched with in gold and silver , frequently augmented by gold crests () and gilt reverse plates ('). His sets and - suites — complete unified fitting ensembles for formal and kozukato mountings — exhibit an elevated coherence of design, from the fine granulation through to the gilt-backed, file-finished construction of individual components. Where the commission demanded it, as in his unryu-themed fittings, Yoshihide proved equally adept at combined with - , a technique noted as uncommon in his usual practice yet rendered with particular splendor.
The repeatedly situates Yoshihide's achievement within the formal aesthetic of high-ranking warrior furnishings, describing his work as "brilliant in coloration yet dignified in taste" and as concealing "a lofty sense of formal elegance within its minute detail." His productions are assessed as careful commissions of -class quality, combining the inherited Sonobe "family-carving" approach with his own "refined and precise carving skill." Whether rendering the bold, vigorous movement of mythical kirin or the restrained protocol of crest-scattered ceremonial fittings, Yoshihide's work is consistently recognized as demonstrating the Sonobe family manner "to the fullest" — a synthesis of Goto orthodoxy and individual mastery that the regards as "truly superb."