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9th June 2011, 02:17 AM | #1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Torrance
Posts: 49
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My friends flea market Kris
My friend called and sent pictures, he found this Kris at Flea Market. Please help me ID it.
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9th June 2011, 03:49 AM | #2 |
Vikingsword Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,293
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The scabbard style is Madura Gabilan .
The mendak is an inexpensive contemporary example . I can't really speak to the 9 wave keris itself with any certainty, nor the handle . I have seen the figure holding a flower before; not sure it's a Maduran pattern or not . |
9th June 2011, 03:56 AM | #3 |
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,892
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All Madura, recent.
Mendak might be made in Jogja. |
9th June 2011, 06:11 AM | #4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Posts: 368
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G'day Alan,
I have some questions. What makes the blade Madura and what can we say about the quality of the blade based on the limitations of the picture; say the shape of the kembang kacang, gandik and pamor formation i.e pamor can be said is positioned at the centre of the blade or not? Is it possible that we compare the physical quality (not age) within the limitations of the pictures of the above keris with the one I attached here? (sorry, I forgot the source of this picture). |
9th June 2011, 12:28 PM | #5 |
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,892
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Rasdan, we need to distinguish between old Madura and recent Madura.
With Filam's keris, we are looking at recent Madura. I've seen a great many blades of this type and quality and for me, its more or less a matter of --- click! it fits the template in my mind. end of story. But even then, I have been wrong when doing this from a pic. I have no doubt that in the cases where I have been wrong, I would not have erred if the blade had been in my hand, but it wasn't, I was looking at internet photos. However, for old Madura it is no different to deciding on a tangguh for Mataram or anything else. This page in my site gives a reasonable explanation of the indicators that we consider. http://www.kerisattosanaji.com/keristangguh.html Probably about all that we can use from a photo is :- pawakan, gandik, point. The point is long, ie, distance from last luk to point, the gandhik is steeply angled, the pawakan is stiff and too upright , straight awkward gonjo, rotan cross section. Madura is one of the easier ones to do from a photo, because the gandhik is very steeply angled --- but sometimes its not, and then it becomes impossible to do a tangguh from a photo, you need to hold the blade. I've said it time and time and time again:- you cannot do tangguh nor learn tangguh from photos and written explanations. Its a guessing game, and the only way to learn the rules of the game is to spend a lot of time with somebody who understands it perfectly and who has access to a lot of good quality keris. There is no other way. |
9th June 2011, 12:43 PM | #6 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
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Thanks for the explanation Alan.
Regarding quality. For example, in the first keris, we can see that the pamor from the pucuk towards mid blade covers the the entire blade width, but towards the sorsoran, there's a section where the pamor does not cover the width evenly. Is this an acceptable feature for a good keris? Within the limitations of the above photos, what can you say about the quality of the 2 keris we have in this thread (in terms of shape etc) ? Do you think the kembang kacang is properly shaped? |
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