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3rd April 2011, 03:47 PM | #1 |
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Existentialistic question
Hi Everybody
Are you aware that, you risk with your collection of edged weapons (and I don't speak to others as guns ...) to ended up with a "museum of Military & Ethnologic " at home? - have you considered to limit your collection ? - what are the limits (if you have) you tried to impose at yourself ? there is, how I try ... (please, no snigger ) to limit myself for prevent at last extremity ... a forecasted burial - edged weapons, knives, swords, sabers, ONLY from countries where I, we lived, visited or worked - NO (yes ... I know) more than; two items of each type, - exception done for exchange or resale purpose AND YOU, HOW DO YOU MANAGE IT ? à + Dom |
3rd April 2011, 04:43 PM | #2 |
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Manage what Dom...problem....who says i have a PROBLEM???!!!
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3rd April 2011, 05:30 PM | #3 |
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Ummmm, wives and significant others might have issues?
Actually, another way to look at it is that you're neither the first nor last owner of most of these pieces, simply their caretaker and admirer for a while. Moreover, they came to you because someone else cared enough to save them for a while. That said, do you want to simply accumulate them, so that when you die, your heirs have to deal with your collection? Or do you want to make sure they all go to good homes when the time is right, whenever that time is? So basically, consider the conditions under which you're willing to let pieces go, as well as when you're willing to buy them. My 0.000002 cents, F |
3rd April 2011, 05:45 PM | #4 |
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I find my specific interests tend to limit my acquisitions .
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3rd April 2011, 07:35 PM | #5 | |
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Quote:
Truth be told there are tons of keris (and for the most part that is what i collect, with the occasional mandau or Moro kris on the side) out there, but i have no need to own them all. So my collecting is already specific and made even more specific by my specific likes and dislikes (and of course my pocketbook ). I have most of my collection in view (in the "museum room") for the enjoyment of myself and others and what is stored away always comes out on a regular basis for maintenance if nothing else. |
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20th June 2011, 07:05 PM | #6 | |
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I ALSO COLLECT LIKE LEE AND SELDOM LET ANYTHING ESCAPE FROM THE COLLECTION BUT HAVE MADE A FEW EXCEPTIONS OVER THE YEARS LETTING ITEMS GO TO COLLECTERS WHO SPECIALIZED IN CERTIAN FIELDS. THE THINGS THAT SAVE ME FROM BEING BURIED IN A PILE OF WEAPONS IS LACKAMOOLAH =(LIMITED MONEY) AND OTHER COLLECTORS WHO OUTBID ME THUS SAVING ME FROM MYSELF. BLESS YOURE LITTLE HEARTS |
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20th June 2011, 07:17 PM | #7 |
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Unfortunately I collect from several different areas but as of late have become very selective. Money or the lack there of does play a major role. Having to pay for college is a big consideration when high end items come up for sale. I also have reached the point where my collection has stabilized and of course there is the do I have any more room for more stuff argument.
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3rd April 2011, 06:08 PM | #8 |
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My habit seems to self control. I buy as much as I can, then have to sell it to buy something even more expensive.
Other than that I try to pick narrow areas of focus and make the weapon buying more like a personal research project as I learn about a period of history. I tend to like to immerse myself in a specific sub topic so I narrow the collection to fit that. Then latch onto another topic and continue the process. I agree with fearn about the care taking aspect in all this. I see no point in hiding pieces away and if I haven't looked something over in a while I'm ready to let it go. I also find that certain pieces I develop a personal connection with and others I don't. Not sure why, just how it goes. |
3rd April 2011, 07:50 PM | #9 |
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I am completely how no one should be; a compulsive consumer .
I buy everything that i come across with; then i get home, cool down a bit and realize i shouldn't have bought such piece. In the next step i hate it so much that i deeply struggle to get rid of it the quickest possible, selling it with inevitable losses. Another wrong path i take is that, instead of gathering money to buy a an expensive fine piece, i first buy the said piece and after try and gather the funds to balance the situation. As for budget control, i could well adopt a motto such as "Beyond rational possibilities" . So folks, just don't be like me |
4th April 2011, 02:00 AM | #10 | |||||||||
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Thank you all who have responded
no pretense of being serious in my approach but it is true ... my wife starts saying "Kefaya" (see below) and I thought I would not be the only experience this kind of .... subject also, my curiosity got carried away, and I threw a stone into the pond Quote:
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- but I subscribe fully with your approach of « caretaker » Quote:
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Thanks again, to every one à + Dom |
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4th April 2011, 08:43 AM | #11 |
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There are a couple of questions here which need to be addressed in my humble opinion.
1. Make sure that your Partner/Wife is happy with your collecting. I have known of partners who have tried to convince the local police that their partner is "about to do something nasty with their items" I will leave you to imagine what was suggested, but happily that particular collector had believable backing to dispute the intended assertion! However BEWARE!! 2. Regarding disposal of your collection upon your death or illness,make sure that the collection is mentioned in your Will AND that the disposal is entrusted to a reliable person who is familiar with what you collect AND the value of the collection. Beneficaries CAN fleece the survivor IF that person is not aware of the true value of items. Stu Last edited by kahnjar1; 4th April 2011 at 09:58 PM. |
3rd April 2011, 09:22 PM | #12 |
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What are these "limits" of which you speak? Is that another Arabic term unknown to us non-Arabic speakers?
My "Collection Direction" is generally encyclopedic in nature. I collect for representation of form; with rare exception, once I have an example or two representative of a people, time, or culture, I stop looking. Hence, my "focus" really knows no geographic or ethnographic boundary, as I see my nascent collection as a tangible record of mankind's collective journey, through which I can occasionally plug into the gestalt of the human experience. |
3rd April 2011, 09:36 PM | #13 |
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fearn is right about the life of the objects. What limits me is primary budget. Then a transecendental maelstrom of struggling with aethetics and intrinsic value. Most of all I enjoy the chase to find an item. When all these elements come together in a joyous climax
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3rd April 2011, 10:02 PM | #14 |
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Well, er, let me say this. I limit myself primarily (though not exclusively) to a specific wish list made of specific pieces. These are primarily PI/Moro, then Ottoman, etc. The pieces on my wish list are pieces that have high quality, age, bling, etc. (Not to mention budget constraints )
I generally keep to my list. Thus one prominent member of our little forum (who has been all over the world seeing other peoples collections and museums) came to my house and said this of my little collection, "You have a great collection, not a big collection, but a great collection! Very focused." I was pleased. |
4th April 2011, 12:39 AM | #15 |
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I aim only for arms that came from muslim people and that is not a very smart thing to do especially when about to start with moro arms and south east asian stuff these are a sea of information.
I take my time and not rush to buy stuff since i have other commitments and my experience with paypal has been frustrating which slows things even more. |
20th June 2011, 08:38 PM | #16 |
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Limit......? what's that? My Mother claims to see the good in all humans. I see the good in all blades.
and then there's the asorted other junk I buy at estate sales because even if it's not a sword (spear, knife, axe, chisel.....) it is a very cool lil whatsit and it's only $1 or whatnot....I've got ashtrays, books, bowls, idols, fans; I've got a model war-canoe (a native model; native of where I do not know!) Hahaha This issue was really in my face about a week ago; I just moved. As usually, I had to go through everything, and some things had to be left behind. Swords? Sure, but (Arnold Swartzeneger accent a-la True Lies) "they were both stainless" Augers though; left back 3 T-handle augers from my parents' shed weight limits of truck springs soooo much steel and iron! At the moment I'm trying to not buy project blades and let whatever creative sword energy I have go into my grinding of new sword blades from old saw blades. That's when you see very cool project blades available, of course: ah, the 3/8" sabre blade I passed up! The self-control is killing me! You don't need it, Tom. I do! You don't! I do!.... I try to pry myself away from "industrial" mass-produced swords, military, reproduction, private-issue; not because I don't enjoy them, but just, as is said; limits and priorities are self-imposing in a world of limitted finances and limitted space. "You can't have everything; where would you keep it?" I try to not collect leather (passed up a nice-looking kattara last week), glass, or fibre art too much; it just degrades before my lifestyle. But then I see an irresistable Baluchi rug (with riders and deer and eagles and chickens and rams and I don't even remember what other animals; cool old rug; I'd like to have it made into a post card) for sale cheap (cheap for a baluchi rug is the same amount as the most I've ever given for a sword though....), so I give it to my sister.... The idea of limitting my collection to a certain style or ethnicity is utterly alien to me. I'm even getting into thrusting swords ha ha ha limits; what an irksome concept that forces its way upon us so inevitably! I wonder about what drives my urge to collect things. I see these TV shows about "hoarding" and I think "leave that old lady alone, you brutes!" |
21st June 2011, 11:34 PM | #17 |
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Space is my problem. My Lady has no objections to my collecting sharp pointy things as long as they are only displayed in one room of the house.
Strange, as she has a display cabinet full of antique perfume bottles in the lounge I try to keep to S.E asia as I spent so much time there in my younger days but there are just too many items that take my fancy. It is the " weird and wonderfull" shapes of some of the blades that really attract my attention. ( She likes them if they are "shiney" ) Roy |
22nd June 2011, 06:54 PM | #18 | |
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Quote:
But wives are weird ... sure thing; mine doesn't seem to give particular notice to the new acquisitions, as they arrive, but everytime i send away some of my 'unfavoured' ones, to both balance space and budget, she looks to me packing it and says: that one? one of the most interesting you have around? . |
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23rd June 2011, 02:55 PM | #19 | |
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Just kidding, but for some reason it is easier to swing swords around, or just to really examine cool old stuff when you're by yourself; maybe she does enjoy them when you're not around. Just so she doesn't leave rust-prints on the blades..... |
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23rd June 2011, 08:47 PM | #20 | |
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27th June 2011, 05:47 PM | #21 |
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hello together
That's no problem restricting it! it simply collects everything has a blade! smile. No, I try to limit myself to 50cm. sometimes it works, sometimes not. smile |
22nd June 2011, 11:43 PM | #22 |
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Possibly there is no definitive answer to these questions, for any of us. There certainly is not for myself.
I started to collect a very long time ago, and initially I collected everything sharp & pointy. Then I developed an interest in Jawa and S.E. Asia in general, and my collecting more or less concentrated on this area of the world. I still acquired other things from time to time. Eventually my interest turned completely to keris and the items that Javanese people call "tosan aji". Then my focus narrowed even further and my principal interest became the keris of Jawa and Bali, and especially archaic forms thereof. As my focus has become more concentrated the items that are not central to my specific interests have been sold. So, what has happened is that my collecting has actually controlled itself, in accordance with my varying focus at different points in time. I very seldom buy anything these days, for the simple reason that I very seldom see anything that is specific to my interests that is both worth buying, and affordable. It is a very regrettable fact of life that the only way I can improve upon what I already have is to spend very much more money than I have available. As to what will happen to it all when I am finally promoted. For some time I have been trimming from around the furthest edges of my collection, and this will continue. Certain items that I have, such as the work of Empu Suparman and Empu Pauzan , as well as my own work, will be bequeathed to a suitable public facility. The same will apply to a couple of pieces with royal provenance. I'd like to pass my handle collection in the same direction, but I doubt that I will find any institution that will accept it. Anything that remains when I move on will be my childrens' problem, not mine. Except for one Surakarta keris that was given to me many years ago, and is a family pusaka keris; that will be returned to the eldest son of the current generation of that family. I have never had any sort of difficulty nor obstruction from anybody I have been married to or living with that has interfered in even the smallest degree with the way in which I chose to spend my money. |
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