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18th July 2005, 12:23 AM | #1 |
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Designing as a variation of tradition
Greetings everyone from this Fantastic forum
Been absent for a while in lack of a topic. Some of you, gentlemen, may remember my visit to http://www.arscives.com/bladesign/visit.aranyik.htm Aranyk which Mark so kindly linked to his website. That blade I bought there at LungSom has meantime been heat treated and the fittings were done here in Macau, and it is now in the final stages of completion. Here's the concept. and here is the blade after heat treatment and finally the blade and the almost-finished scabbard, superb work by Nathan Creel. I will now go on in the next post |
18th July 2005, 12:30 AM | #2 |
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That looks fantastic, Antonio! I always love to see your concepts go from digitized renderings to finished sword.
When you have the time, could you share with us the dimensions, specs and materials used? I'm looking forward to seeing the finished product. Thank you for sharing this with us, my friend. |
18th July 2005, 12:48 AM | #3 | |
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Quote:
Thank you. It is most kind of you. You were really fast at posting I was still gathering my thoughts and typing. I am honored for your words. The blade is 25 inches long but I don't have it with me yet. The handle is about 11 to 12 inches to give the blade a rocking motion when handled. I believe the scabbard will be about 28 inches, considering the fish tail style that I borrowed from some silver covered dhas I was have seen. I hope to have it with me in August. Nathan Creel did a fantastic job with the mountings and the scabbard. I will surely post it here. I will still be doing the polish myself Andrew, please check your PM in a little while Thank you once more for the kind words. |
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18th July 2005, 08:17 PM | #4 |
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Hello Antonio,
While I have been entirely focused on the study of historical antique edged weapons for many years, and have admittedly a distinct aversion to modern and reproduction forms....I am profoundly overwhelmed at the beauty of these pieces!! Your magnificent work truly keeps the art of edged weapons alive...an aspect I had not considered, and is wonderfully worded in your statement on the designs of today becoming tomorrows antiques. Bravo Sir!!! All the very best, Jim |
18th July 2005, 08:45 PM | #5 |
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Hi Jim,
Thank you for your kind words. I often recall and bear in mind that once, a stone was hit with another stone and sharp edges appeared on it. Then some kind of heavenly metal was sharpened the same way until bronze casting was used, only again to be replaced by iron, then steel, shape after shape. If we bear this in mind we come to the inevitable conclusion that the history of mankind is that of successive oblivions or replacements. Hence that the Past of our Present can be seen with different eyes. Before we had the Migration Era. People are migrating nowadays at incredible rates. In China alone, at least 400 million migrated from the poorer interior to the more developped coastal cities. The USA is a nation of immigrants. We all have immigrated from truth to truth in history, in objects, in beliefs. What we today cherish as an ethnic antique may be replaced for another type of ethnic concept, for a Han dha surely suffered the shape influence of the Chinese, eventually. I am sorry for not being learned enough to know the evolution of ethnic weapons as we call them today, for they are beautiful. But somehow, at any given moment, everyone is making history happen. Very best regards |
19th July 2005, 12:36 AM | #6 |
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Nice day for Dah's
Beautiful scabbard and grip completion. I see the extended tang worked out well.
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29th August 2005, 04:22 PM | #7 |
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Mountings finished and with me
Hi Everyone,
I just thought I would update you all with the finished mountings by Nathan Creel. It came out very nice IMHO. Here is some more detail I think the grooves look wonderful and provide a great grip. Now the worse dreaded task for me: Polishing. It will take weeks, with my schedule. But it tests my patience Cheers everyone |
18th July 2005, 12:40 AM | #8 |
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The entire concept formed in my mind almost the moment I was getting back in the van that took us from Lung Som's.
Being almost totally incapable of woodworking, and not being a collector of antiques, while I admire them immensely, I have this urge to input my own concepts to almost everything, be it contemporary sword mountings, or furniture or other areas of design. As my incursion into the sword world became more consistent I have noticed a hybridation coming from the circulation of information. The sequential transformation of the shape of a traditional bowie into a knife that incorporates different and alien materials to the original (damascus, shape, lack of guard, handle decoration) and so very often the display of the differential heat treatment. It seems that we are somehow viewing the antiques of tomorrow, where the story will be different. Any thoughts about his later issue? That's how I define design: conceiving today the past of tomorrow. Very best to everyone |
20th July 2005, 08:35 PM | #9 |
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Blowing my own trumpet
This is the handle I made on a shasqa for a Mr Big in Kazakstan. I only work in wax but as you can see it is a pretty important part, it is then finnished and assembled by other craftsmen. I have great difficulty in getting photos of finnished work, unfortunately this is all I have, no pics of the blade or scabbard. The scabbard was steel lined and covered in enameled silver section of simmilar patterns to the blade. The name on the blade is Firmin and sons plc est 1677 though talking to the silversmith I think it was actually made in Germany. What you see here is a snow leopard, silver gilt, pearls, and blue enamel. The fuller is gilt and blued. Tim
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20th July 2005, 08:49 PM | #10 |
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Antonio,
I think that dha is going to look great when finished , you have a good eye for putting things together. Please let us see the finished sword |
20th July 2005, 11:49 PM | #11 |
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Hi RhysMichael,
Thank you for the kind words. I actually can't wait to see it finished. Nathan is a very good craftsman and smith. It is my privilege that he has accepted to do the woodwork and mounting. I will surely place a review here, although some of the earlier steps were not photographically documented because of lack of batteries in the camera. But Nathan's work is superb IMHO. |
21st July 2005, 09:16 AM | #12 |
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All I know is that there is only one Mr Big in Kazakstan and these kind of toys tend to be gifts that curry favour, what ever next Tim
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21st July 2005, 10:03 AM | #13 | |
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Quote:
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20th July 2005, 11:43 PM | #14 |
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Very nice carving Tim.
Thank you so much for sharing. There must be some very rich people in Kazakstan Best |
5th August 2005, 05:37 PM | #15 |
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At last I have a complete picture of this sword. I hope it is okay to show it in this thread, it is a variation of tradition and quite attractive even if I say so myself. Tim
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5th August 2005, 05:56 PM | #16 |
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Very nice indeed Tim.
Thank you very much for sharing Is the blade custom made? I see those grooves. I'm not versed in this type of blade, so apologies for asking. Best regards, Antonio |
5th August 2005, 06:34 PM | #17 |
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Hello Antonio,
Although this was made as a shashka, I feel the fullered blade has a strong resemblance to British or Prussian heavy cavalry sabres of the Waterloo type. Tim |
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