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#1 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2018
Posts: 674
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#2 | |
Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,218
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Yes, i suppose this blade my have seen some use before the war. One thing for certain is that it is a very serious blade, not made cheaply or just for show and it does show some wear, though in what context it is hard to say. |
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#3 | ||||
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Join Date: Oct 2018
Posts: 674
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1. Linamay- starts narrow from the tang, then straight spine, bulges near the tip, no false edge. 2. Bakutan- May be narrow all throughout or progresses in the same way as Linamay; a clip point starts from the last 1/5th or even 1/7th of the blade; the underside (blade edge) is round. May have a false edge. The main confusion, even among locals, is focused on the kinampit and ginunting, reason being that smiths from different areas in Panay may classify them about the same, or interchange the terms. With regard to FilTradBlade's classification, I believe they classify it as such: 3. Ginunting- Resembles an upside-down linamay. 4. Kinampit- Resembles the usual ginunting blade profile found in many modern blades. That being said...I use the 'kinampit' term more often, as the locals of Libacao, Aklan (the highlands) prefer use that as a catch-both term. There are several sources in Panay Island of modern talibong, I believe these may be the same sources for the vintage and antique ones [proceeds from municipality, province] : 1. Estancia, Iloilo 2. Sibalom, Antique 3. Culasi, Antique 4. Tapaz, Capiz 5. Libacao, Aklan Quote:
I'm including here additional pics of vintage Iloilo talibongs; also from the same source as mine. They haven't been restored yet, straight out of storage I think. Last edited by xasterix; 1st February 2019 at 02:03 AM. |
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