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6th September 2019, 10:56 AM | #1 |
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Blades without a scabbard!
When you buying blades without the scabbard, how do you do….
Do you let someone make a scabbard which will look correct and which will fit the blade…. Or do you just display it as it is because in the end the blade is the most important thing…. Should like to hear your opinions about it…. Best, Stefan |
6th September 2019, 11:50 AM | #2 |
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Hi
I just let it as it is. For 2 reasons: first a new scabbard will be modern and ugly, second to save some money. The biggest problem for me is when the sword comes with an original and ugly scabbard... Kubur |
8th September 2019, 04:25 AM | #3 | |
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8th September 2019, 11:46 AM | #4 |
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I think it depend also from the weapons you collect. A keris for example isn't complete without a scabbard. But a kris I display also without a scabbard, it's the same with barongs. By gunongs I try to collect with scabbards but have a special one without. In general I can say that it's more desirable for my area of collecting to have a scabbard with the blade but I don't have problems when they come without.
Regards, Detlef |
9th September 2019, 01:17 AM | #5 |
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There is an old saying that it is better to be young, healthy and rich than old, sick and dirt poor:-)
So it is with our sharpies: it is obviously better to get a sword with the original scabbard in a perfect shape than without a scabbard at all. That being said, most of ( at least Oriental) swords dating 2-4 centuries had their scabbards changed not once and not twice. Can’t remember the source, but Russian Cossacks had to get a new scabbard every 3 years. With all the Imperial Russian graft, theft and negligence this period might have been extended to 5 easily, to 10 likely and to 20 quite possibly. But they must have been changed at some stage of the game. Scabbards were deliberately exposed to all kinds of damage, - mechanical, climatic, just age related deterioration of organic components, etc,- to protect the blade. Even assuming 20 years as a reasonable estimate, an 18 century Shamshir, kilij or tulwar by now is on its at least 5th scabbard of it’s working life only if it was out of military use around WWI. In our ( collectors) case, storing swords within their scabbards invites rust. It’s nice to have a scabbard, but it most likely will not be original and prudently stored separately. Last edited by ariel; 9th September 2019 at 02:22 AM. |
9th September 2019, 01:46 AM | #6 | |
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1st October 2019, 11:09 PM | #7 | |
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A debatable point. You can't convince the Japanese sword crowd of that, haha. In my experience, keeping blades clean and oiled inside well-fitted scabbards with clean interior channels (i.e. no accumulated gunk or even deposits of old rust) is the best. It is important that if made of wood, that the body be made of a timber that is as acid-neutral as possible. No pine or coniferous timber (due to the acidity of sap which those woods are prone to holding in their cellular structure even after a long time) or oak (high in tannic acid). Deciduous woods of species along the lines of alder, poplar, magnolia, etc. are fine, and their relative softness will not scratch or dull the edge. It seems that a lot of traditional cultures realized this. Not only the Japanese, who came to regard the magnolia ( ho -no-ki ) as ideal. Note that the Mughals also had the concept of a shirasaya or resting scabbard, as Stone comments on in his Glossary, and supported by the large number of Indian swords seen in cloth covered sheaths without metal fittings for wearing, or field use. The one type of scabbard that seems to be an unfailing rust magnet for blades is the one made entirely of leather. The tannic acid used in the processing of hides in most cultures is responsible. I would not store blades for any extended period in such sheaths. With any type of scabbard, a blade is best preserved with a protective coating. Some guys like Renaissance wax, which is fine. Others stick to oil (my preference are the Japanese magnolia or clove oils made specifically for blades, I use it on any blade that is "in polish" or etched to reveal watering, no matter what the culture). A little bit goes a long way, it it has a fragrant smell, and it protects for a long time without affecting the wood. |
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6th September 2019, 11:53 AM | #8 |
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Some collectors see a scabbard as vital but I have never cared that much for their presence, viewing them as a bonus only. Perhaps this is because I've always liked to display my swords with the blades naked and so I have a pile of labelled scabbards propped forlornly in a corner!
Of course, there are some exceptions to this (a brass scabbard on a British Victorian sword is sometimes more important than the sword itself, for example). |
6th September 2019, 12:43 PM | #9 |
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Hi,
For me it is important to have the item "complete". Regardless of whether it is Austro_Hungarian sabre (the value is higher) or e.g. Salampasu short sword. In the case of some of African weapons the scabbard presents very nice example of African handicraft and culture. So I prefer "with scabbard" and from this reason I can wait for years for the complete item, or I buy old damaged scabbard and repair it. In some cases I buy scabbard even separately - but must be original. I never make new scabbards. In some cases of African weapons it is nearly impossible to reach original scabbard and - nothing can be done then Martin |
6th September 2019, 03:09 PM | #10 |
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Well, on July 2007 I posted a discussion on the subject under: Ethiopian scabbard: to fake or not to fake. Check it out. Ron
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6th September 2019, 05:14 PM | #11 |
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Very interesting thread, Ron!
Thank you so very much for pointing it out for me and I must say that I am amazed about your skills. Personally I must admit that I have my thumb in the middle of the hand so to speak.... If I can choose, of course I prefer to have the scabbard together with the blade when I shall buy something but if it is an old interesting blade I do not hesitate to buy it without the scabbard too.... Things can happen with old scabbards so it is how it is.... Best, Stefan |
6th September 2019, 05:50 PM | #12 |
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A most interesting, and unusual topic Stefan.
Scabbard or no scabbard.........it is really a matter of preference it some ways. In my early collecting days, I was able to afford regulation type swords which were without scabbard. These were deemed 'incomplete' by collectors usually so dealers would reduce price accordingly. I later discovered (to my dismay and shock) that there were actually collectors who COLLECTED scabbards alone! which I totally could not understand. In many cases of swords without scabbards, discounting the idea of them being collected away from the sword itself, the strong possibility of the sword being a battlefield pick up after being separated from the owner in combat, the scabbard usually still with him. With ethnographic weapons, there are typically more pragmatic situations. The kampilan for example, is typically fitted with a break away scabbard, slats of wood bound together which are sheared away as the sword hits first strike, without being drawn. Many cultures regard the scabbard as a 'house', where the sword lives, and nomenclature uses according terms. The idea of protection of the blade is also key. The Japanese typically store their blades in shira saya mountings, including a scabbard of plain wood which will protect from moisture. Regular scabbards, often with decoration and treatments which attract moisture were deadly to these amazing blades as corrosion was inevitably attracted by these. On regulation swords, one of the most intriguing cases was in India, where troopers were shocked by the effective potential of the deadly sharp blades of Indian warriors. It turned out they were actually old British blades, highly honed and kept well oiled in wooden scabbards. The metal scabbards not only were noisy, gleamed in the light revealing positions, attracted moisture , but dulled the blades. For me, if displaying a sword, the scabbard is simply extra and takes more space. If the sword is an investment, then having the original scabbard is key. For ethnographic swords, as long as blade is maintained, no need for scabbard. |
6th September 2019, 08:15 PM | #13 | |
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But I think in the case of old African weapons the patina on the scabbard is bonus. (In I think two Ethiopian cases I successfully adapted another old scabbard with a little bit different curvature and one even shrinked by using ethanol (wrap the scabbard with soaked textile and put it into plastic bag, and push the blade step by step deeper and deeper every ca 2 days ...) |
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6th September 2019, 08:54 PM | #14 |
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Direct Link to 2007 post by Ron
http://vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=4951
Here is the link to Ron's 2007 post mentioned above. |
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