9th June 2012, 07:49 PM | #1 |
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Twistcore kris with... erm.. Wha-- What is this?
An obviously cross-cultural piece. Beautiful, but very confusing to me.
The hilt seems unfamiliar to me, but the fact that the fittings on the hilt includes a small attatchment shaped like the buddha makes me think that this may not have ended its tenure as a weapon in use with Moro hands. Also, the hilt does not seem familiar to me at all. I am very interested to hear and learn from all of you about where this kris could have ended up that it would look like this in the end. Perhaps also find out what the blade shape would be originally for a hilt of whatever culture this rehilt job came from. Thanks, thought I'd share 'cause I like unusual piecesand I am a sucker for twistcore stuff. I have attached pictures, but bigger pics can be seen here: http://i48.tinypic.com/33ynhcg.jpg http://i48.tinypic.com/30vj0io.jpg http://i49.tinypic.com/34q7o8o.jpg http://i45.tinypic.com/2n9gvbn.jpg http://i46.tinypic.com/352rhhx.jpg Last edited by ThePepperSkull; 9th June 2012 at 08:00 PM. |
9th June 2012, 11:10 PM | #2 |
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Congrats, that's really a neat find! Looks like an early 20th c. (or possibly turn of the century) kalis taluseko to me.
Toss the pommel and grip binding (possibly everything except the ferrule and asang-asang); IMHO it looks like a unqualified western repair. Lucky you - a complete piece would have demanded a much higher price... And please post pics after you gave the blade a good cleaning and etching! Regards, Kai |
10th June 2012, 10:43 PM | #3 |
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I'm with Kai on this one. I also agree - keep the baka-baka and the ferrule, lose the rest of the hilt. However, I might say slightly older, perhaps no earlier than the 1860s?
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11th June 2012, 10:17 PM | #4 |
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Thanks for the info, gents!
I was thinking of keeping the ferrule and baca-baca, and replacing the rest of the hilt with a simple narra kakatua pommeled hilt with wrapping laquered black. I thought the hilt it had on now may have been a hilt form from another culture, but seeing as it is a western repair/re-hilt, I won't feel bad getting rid of the rest of it. Although, the metal buddha, etc pieces on the grip remind me of Japanese menuki. Possibly from a smaller blade like a tanto. Does anyone know if the buddha was a common type of menuki form used? I know the fudo myo-o was a figure that featured in a lot of old katana menuki, but the buddha I am not sure of. |
12th June 2012, 03:23 AM | #5 |
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I PERSONALLY WOULD LOOK INTO THIS ITEM A BIT MORE BEFORE I RUSHED TO DISCARDED THE CURRENT HANDLE AND MAKE IT MORE NORMAL. AT PRESENT IT IS UNIQUE AND FROM THE PICTURES THE HANDLE DOSEN'T LOOK LIKE SOME RECENT POORLY DONE JOB BY AN UNSKILLED WESTERNER. HOW IS THE BALANCE DOES THE HANDLE FIT THE BLADE PROPERLY FOR ACTUAL USE IN BATTLE. I WOULD THINK IT IS MORE LIKELY TO BE OF ASIAN DESIGN AND BUDHIST SPECIFICALLY. CHECK THE TWO DECORATIVE BUTTONS AS WELL AS THEY MAY BE OF SOME SIGNIFICANCE. THE CORD OR WIRE MAY SHED SOME INFORMATION AS WELL, IS IT SILK?. WITH A BIT OF RESEARCH SOME OF THIS KRIS STORY MAY BE REAVEALED. WITH A NEW HANDLE YOU WILL HAVE ANOTHER NICE BLADE WITH A NEW HANDLE. AT PRESENT IT MAY NOT BE OF ABSOLUTE PURE FORM BUT IT IS A BIT OF A MYSTERY. IS THE WORKMANSHIP GOOD AND ARE THE METAL FITTINGS CHEAP OR DO THEY SHOW AGE AND GOOD WORKMANSHIP THIS SHOULD HELP TO DETERMINE YOUR COURSE OF ACTION. NICE ONE I LIKE IT.
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12th June 2012, 08:16 AM | #6 |
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If it is indeed a hilt form from another culture, I will do my research and see what i can come up with.
Perhaps if I plan on restoring the Kris with cultural-approriate hilt, I will keep the old hilt intact as well. Perhaps try and find a blade more suited for it? Or I may go with your suggestion, Vandoo, and just keep it as it is. If the hilt is indeed a distinct ethnographic form as opposed to a western replacement, it's bound to have an interesting story to it. If only these blades would speak. |
12th June 2012, 01:33 PM | #7 |
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i'm with vandoo... i don't understand what's the deal with throwing away the handle. it's obvious that it's not a traditional handle, but the moros of your has been known to use non-traditional items on their weapon. added a couple of pictures that have i not known the provenance of this particular shield, i would definitely thought of it as a western addition. the bottle bottom bosed is a pre-1898 shield. it would be a pity if you throw the handle away and somehow come to find out, this was original to the sword.
nice twisty core, brah! can't wait to see after you clean the blade. hopefully etched to bring out all her splendid beauty!!! |
12th June 2012, 07:19 PM | #8 |
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I'm in favor of not messing with it. Here are some of my arguments;
1) From what the pics show the handle and wrap look well done. 2) There does appear to be some age to the rehilt, yes I know that can be faked 3) More importantly; the rehilit incorporated the ferrule and baca-baca. This means someone understood or at least wanted to preserve what was there. I lean toward someone knew what they were doing as these things have a habit of being removed and sold. 4) It's kinda a unique and someone went through some effort to do it that way which means it may have some history behind it. All that said; nice piece! These are a favorite of mine, so I have fondness for them and like to see them preserved un-altered as much as possible. |
12th June 2012, 08:22 PM | #9 |
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I THINK ITS GOOD TO GO SLOW WHEN DECIDING TO RE-ARRANGE OR REPLACE THINGS ON A WEAPON. I HAVE HAD THE UNFORTUNATE EXPERIENCE OF HAVING A KRIS HANDLE THOUGHT TO BE ON BACKWARDS TURNED AROUND ONLY TO FIND THE WEAPON WAS THEN OFF BALANCE AND OFF CENTER AND FELT LIKE IT HAD A BENT TANG. THIS RENDERED THAT KERIS A VERY POOR WEAPON WHICH CERTIANLY WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN TOLERATED BY ANY MORO WARRIOR. I TOO CAN'T ABIDE SOMETHING THAT LOOKS LIKE A SWORD BUT HAS THE BALANCE OF A TIRE IRON.
JUDGE BY WORKMANSHIP, MATERIALS USED, AND THE FEEL OF THE WEAPON IN THE HAND. YOUR EXAMPLE SEEMS TO HAVE A WOOD FOUND IN THE PHILIPPINES AND SOME AGE BUT DOES APPEAR TO HAVE VARNISH ON IT WITH SOME WEAR. IT COULD HAVE BEEN DAMAGED IN BATTLE AND THE HANDLE REPLACED BY SOME NON-MORO PERSON. WERE THERE ANY ASIAN TROOPS THERE DURING THE SPANISH TIMES OR THE EARLY AMERICAN PRESENCE? THERE WERE CERTIANLY JAPANESE PRESENT DURING WW2 AND CHINESE TRADE GOES WAY BACK IN TIME. AS YOU SAID I WISH THESE THINGS COULD TALK AS MANY INTERESTING STORIES HAVE BEEN LOST. |
12th June 2012, 10:06 PM | #10 | |||
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Gentlemen, I am convinced. It stays as-is. The most I will have done to it is a blade cleaning to remove any active rust. Perhaps a vinegar etch at a later time after I've had some more practice etching.
The shape and buddhist iconigraphy on the hilt are very interesting to me... can anyone tell which style the metal fittings come from? This may reveal to us where or whose hands this piece ended up in back in the day. Was buddhism ever practiced in mindanao or could this have been rehilted elsewhere? The "flower" on one of the fittings of the hilt reminds me vaguely of work I have seen on Ban swords of the Lepcha people of india. Were they buddhist? Could this have been a rehilt from the himalayas or region close to? Quote:
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Reason 4 is the main reason why I am hesitant to remove anything or change anything on this piece besides removing any active rust. Like I said beforehand: If only these blades could speak, I wonder what stories this old twistcore would have to tell us. Quote:
I'm leaning more towards this being procured somehow by someone of another culture and then rehiltd to suit that particularr person's needs as opposed to being a moro-done rehilt. And about it being etched -- you and me both, brah. As polar opposite as some of us may feel about its current furniture (I myself am still conflicted but am still keeping it as-is), I'm sure all of us Kris fanatics like a good twistcore pattern. Last edited by ThePepperSkull; 12th June 2012 at 10:23 PM. |
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12th June 2012, 11:36 PM | #11 | ||||||
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Regards, Kai |
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12th June 2012, 11:46 PM | #12 | |
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Hello Ron,
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I also have a very hard time to imagine any self-respecting Moro to come up with this weird pommel, a bad (smooth) grip wrapping, and, especially, with 2 human figures representing a kind of deity outside the Muslim realm? This just doesn't cut it, IMHO. Regards, Kai |
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12th June 2012, 11:49 PM | #13 | |
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Quote:
I am interested to see where this goes, but I feel I must remind us all that we are friends here and as different as our opinions get, we will benefit from discourse and dialogue rather than argumentative back-and-forths. Hasn't happened yet, but I thought I'd pre-empt it before it gets heated and degenerates into something less civil. I await all of your responses! |
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13th June 2012, 12:47 AM | #14 |
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THERE IS NO PROBLEM, NO PRESSURE
WE ALL HAVE OUR INDIVIDUAL WAYS OF LOOKING AT COLLECTING. FROM A STRICTLY PURE MORO IDEAL A GOOD OLD MORO HANDLE , PERHAPS WITH A WELL PATINATED IVORY COCATOOA CIRC 1890 WOULD LOOK GREAT ON THIS BLADE. AND WHILE WE ARE WISHING A GOOD OLD SCABBARD THAT FITS WITH SILVER. THAT WOULD RESTORE THIS BLADE TO ITS OLD GLORY AND BE AS CLOSE TO ORIGINAL AS POSSIBLE UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES THAT WOULD BE MY CHOICE IF IT WERE POSSIBLE. BUT TO COME UP WITH THESE TRULY OLD QUALITY ITEMS IS ALSO LIKELY WISHFUL THINKING. TO HAVE NEWLY MADE HANDLE AND FITTINGS AND SCABBARD IS JUST NOT THE SAME IN MY VIEW. TO DO IT PROPERLY WOULD BE QUITE EXPENSIVE AND YOU MAY NOT BE COMPLETELY SATISFIED WITH THE RESULTS WHEN DONE. THE BLADE SURELY DOES NEED A GOOD ETCH TO SEE WHAT YOU HAVE AT ITS BEST. SO THE HANDLE CAN BE REMOVED FOR THAT IF YOU WANT. CHECK INSIDE THE HANDLE TO SEE APPROX AGE AS WELL TO LOOK AND SEE IF THERE ARE ANY BUDHIST PRAYERS ON PAPER WITHIN. I WOULD BE INTERESTED IN HOW THE SWORD HANDLES AND FEELS IN USE. IT IS SUGGESTED THE HANDLE WOULD MAKE ITS USE AWKWARD BUT IT DOSEN'T LOOK MUCH DIFFERENT IN SIZE FROM SOME MORO COCATOOA HILTS IVE SEEN AND SMALLER THAN THE GIANT IVORY ONES WHICH ARE A BIT UNWIELDLY. I JUST THINK AN ATTEMPT SHOULD BE MADE TO FIND OUT HOW AND WHY AND PERPHAPS BY WHOM THIS KRIS WAS CUSTOMIZED BY A PREVIOUS OWNER AND TO KEEP IT WITH THE KRIS WHEN IT IS PASSED ON TO ITS NEXT HOME IN THE FAR FUTURE. IN THE MEANTIME DO AS YOU WISH AND ENJOY IT AND DON'T FEEL GUILTY REGARDLESS OF YOUR DECISIONS. |
13th June 2012, 12:51 AM | #15 | ||
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Hello Dave,
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Regards, Kai |
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13th June 2012, 12:57 AM | #16 | ||
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Hello Barry,
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Regards, Kai |
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13th June 2012, 04:57 AM | #17 |
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STRANGELY IT LOOKS OK BUT WHEN YOU PICK IT UP IT FEELS ALL WRONG. I PLAN TO WORK ON IT SOON AND I SHOULD BE ABLE TO FIX IT EVEN IF I HAVE TO REVERSE THE HANDLE AGAIN, BUT FOR NOW I HAVE OTHER PROJECTS. SO MUCH TO DO AND SO LITTLE TIME.
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13th June 2012, 03:42 PM | #18 |
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Here's my two cents...
1) I'm not sure why this is necessarily a Western repair. The hilt seems asian and may well have been added by an asian owner. 2) The hilt seems to have some age and to have been in place for some time. 3) Though untraditional it is not particularly unattractive. 4) It seems to have been attached well and securely. I can't tell from the photos though if the baca-baca is engaged/attached to the hilt. If it is that is an extra point for leaving it as is. 5) I don't think we will ever know exactly when, where or why this hilt was added to this kris. Some assumptions have been put forth, but i believe that conjecture is a bit meaningless in this case. It seems to me that we are often all too interested in "creating" our own perfected/ideal artifacts, upgrading this and changing that to meet our own expectation of what we want out collectable to be. History isn't perfect or ideal. I am not opposed to conservative approaches to restoration, but from my perspective i believe that sometimes we should simply accept a weapon for what it is, especially when we have no direct knowledge of it's history or how or why it has become what it is. |
13th June 2012, 06:33 PM | #19 |
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If you're really so inclined to know dave, if this hilt was a western vs. local addition, you could perform a simple test.
What you're gonna need is a paint stripper heat gun and a pair of Ov Gloves. Place the heat gun on the widest part of the blade and apply heat. Keep it there until it melts the plant resin that was commonly used back then. I'm sure by now you are familiar with the scent. Anything else, like epoxy or glue, would produce a different smell. Not 100% accuate, but it would be somewhat safe to say it was added back in the islands.. The counter to this would be there's a possibility that if it was redone here, that person could've brought back with him some of the same plant resin, but what are the chances, right? Not scientific nor 100% accurate, but it's a step closer... BTW, what's that red looking thingy between the ferrule and the blade? |
14th June 2012, 02:26 AM | #20 |
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^ Very interesting method! I will try that once it gets to me, assuming the pitch is the same material.
As for what the red material is at the base of the blade, I am assuming it is the kind of pitch that the rehilter used, so I am guessing it is not the plant-based pitch we're all used to seeing with Moro blades. Either that or it's... Dare I say it, a really bad case of rust. I am hoping it's the former. Last edited by ThePepperSkull; 14th June 2012 at 04:26 AM. |
14th June 2012, 08:46 AM | #21 | |
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Hello Dave,
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Please let us know how the kris feels/handles when you received it! Regards, Kai |
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14th June 2012, 08:58 AM | #22 | |
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Hello Ron,
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However, the reverse isn't necessarily true: lots of competent modern restorers would also use resin and up until a few decades ago using cutler's resin would have been the default procedure in most parts of the world, including western workshops. An experienced nose may be able to discern between different base resins utilised in the given mix but then again, resins from the archipelago (damar, etc.) have been widely traded for centuries... Regards, Kai Last edited by kai; 14th June 2012 at 09:20 AM. |
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14th June 2012, 09:16 AM | #23 | ||||||
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Hello David,
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Regards, Kai |
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14th June 2012, 01:43 PM | #24 | ||||
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yo dave,
i'm with kai that it could be a piece of cloth. kai, yes, the damask was widely used. far as the unscientific test i suggested, the logic behind that is, had it been changed in the western world, i highly doubt whoever did it was a competent restorer. here's my line of reasoning:if you are indeed correct in your assumption that this particular hilt wasn't original, why would that restorer go to all the trouble of using plant resin just to attached a hilt that is not even typical to this type of sword? and btw, on my suggestion of heating the blade. i meant to say the removal of it is unnecessary. once the plant resin melts, you should be able to smell it. just hold it together for a minute or so until it gets hard again. (dam, that didn't came out right ) i realize dave doesn't have this kris yet, but for the sake of argument, you said: Quote:
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The Sulu Archipelago seems to have become the dumping ground for the Oriental world. Here you find renegade Arabs; native Indian soldiers, for whom India has become too hot; even the Sudan, bad as it is, occasionally has a man so bad, he has to drift to Sulu. Like a Western mining camp of old, Sulu is full of adventure. - John F. Bass, Harper's Weekly, November 18, 1899 with that in mind, any of these foreigners could've brought a hilt from his native land, or broke a sword he originally carried, or decided to have a local artisan designed him hilt based on his description, etc, etc. and had it attached to a blade he found in a marketplace, or had the local smith made him one, or a blade he found on a dead moro, etc, etc. |
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16th June 2012, 10:54 PM | #25 |
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I also think the first comment (of Kai) is just downright the best;
PLEASE TOSS AWAY THAT FANTASY HANDLE! You could make a better one yourself am sure! Keep the ganja as that is a nice replacement anyway. Anyone can see the handle is not right. One can start fantasising about how it COULD be correct, but . . .noóóó'. This blade is beautiful on its own even without blade really! (really beauty-blade!) It sure is not too dificult to make a handle; find out what form it should have n make it a nice summerholiday project. First attempt may not turn out right but the second will (hopefully). Use a harder (tropical) wood. Yes thank you guys for being so happy about me ALSO giving my opinion |
5th September 2013, 09:58 AM | #26 |
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A year later update. I still have not touched it. All that was done was that any active rust was removed but really have not removed any patina.
The handle is still on until an origin can be determined. Honestly the more I look at it, the more I feel like it is modern. The wood at the pommel doesn't feel very old and I have a suspicion that the twine wrap is a new material. The red that you guys mentioned at the base of the blade is some type of resin holding the blade into the hilt. I thought I'd ask since it's been a little over a year... Am I wrong about the hilt? It seems new to me the more I look at it and I can't determine an origin for the hilt style. It's such an unfamiliar shape. |
5th September 2013, 06:28 PM | #27 |
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IT WILL NOT HURT TO REMOVE THE HANDLE AND ETCH THE BLADE. THAT WILL ALLOW YOU TO BETTER ACESS WHAT YOU HAVE AND ACT ON ALL THE SUGGESTIONS ABOVE. I WOULD CONSIDER THIS A CUSTOM PIECE NOT A FANTASY PIECE SOMEONE FOR WHATEVER REASON PUT THIS TOGETHER LIKE IT IS AND I SERIOUSLY DOUBT THERE IS MORE THAN ONE LIKE IT.
YOU HAVE PICTURES AS IT NOW IS AND YOU AN KEEP THE HANDLE IF YOU DECIDE TO MAKE A NEW TRADITIONAL ONE FOR IT. THEN IN CASE YOU SEE AN OLD PICTURE IN THE FUTURE OF SOME FAMOUS PERSON WEARING THIS SWORD YOU WILL STILL HAVE THE PARTS AND PICTURES FOR PROVENANCE. I AGREE IT WOULD LOOK MUCH BETTER FULLY RESTORED IN TRADITIONAL MORO FITTINGS IF YOU ARE WILLING TO SPEND THE MONEY AND FIND THE PERSON TO DO THE WORK. AS BEFORE NO PRESSURE ITS YOUR BABY AND YOU CAN DO WHAT YOU FEEL BEST. WE LOOK FORWARD TO PICTURES OF A NICE PATTERNED BLADE AFTER THE ETCH. Last edited by VANDOO; 5th September 2013 at 06:53 PM. |
5th September 2013, 08:22 PM | #28 |
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Agree with Barry. There are sometimes offered newly carved very nice handles by ebay, one of this handles will look much better with this very nice blade.
Regards, Detlef |
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