21st August 2024, 09:03 PM | #1 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,079
|
Gile Jile or what have you.
Picked this up at a local arms fair on Sunday, well shabby and I nearly left it on the table but had second thoughts. I didn't have one and we don't see them that often in my neck of the woods. The dealer reckoned it was a Foreign Legion bringback as told him by the family he bought it from. It makes no odds, I buy the blades not the stories.
|
21st August 2024, 11:54 PM | #2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2023
Location: City by the Black Sea
Posts: 164
|
|
22nd August 2024, 03:17 PM | #3 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Belgium
Posts: 169
|
Not a bad specimen, the blade is a bit rough and if you redo the wire (silver?) it will look much better.
Regards Marc |
22nd August 2024, 04:28 PM | #4 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,079
|
I certainly intend to sort out the wire, which looks more like brass when in hand. And that is probably all I will do, it's a plain and basic example and as we say here in the Isle of the MIghty, "You can't make a silk purse out of a pigs ear"!
|
22nd August 2024, 05:51 PM | #5 |
Vikingsword Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,294
|
Well, it isn't quite silk, but it has been done.
Building on advances in the synthetic-fiber industry, Arthur D. Little had 100 pounds of sows’ ears reduced to glue, which the company’s chemists then dissolved, filtered, and finally turned into fiber. The “silk” fiber was woven into two small purses that resemble the kind used by French nobility in the Middle Ages. Today one purse is stored at the National Museum of American History, while the other is at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. |
22nd August 2024, 11:02 PM | #6 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,079
|
A bit of fun ..... but not really relevant to the case in hand!
|
|
|