11th December 2006, 01:25 AM | #31 |
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I do not know the root of this handle form, but I have seen them associated with Jogja keris more than with any other type
I think that might have been list 49 David. Yes, that's an East Jawa type. |
11th December 2006, 01:34 AM | #32 |
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Thanks Alan. Yes, it could have been 49. They run together after a while.
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11th December 2006, 02:35 PM | #33 |
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Hi Rick,
Well, I've given up trying to ascertain the age, but I think it is probably not very old. Hi David, Thanks. This is definitely no high keris, and it came at a "not high" price, though I'd be a little bit hesitant to say cheap. The keris is, as Empu Kumis (sorry, forgot his latest forum nick) once said, a nice piece for a collection, but not a great one. Hi Alan, Thanks for pointing that out. Yes, the hilt is a Yogya hilt, as the seller had informed me. However, this is the closest form to a East Javanese hilt that I can find. The original hilt on the singa barong is too large and very ugly. I guess I'll have to have a "redux redux" when I can find a small-sized East Javanese hilt that can fit the proportionately long peksi. I know what you are referring to. I spent a long time scrutinising the singa's points of connection to the blade when I first bought the keris and I do see some disjointed lines. However, that does not apply to the tail, which is definitely part of the original keris body. So unless only the body was welded on to the remnants of the blade, from which the tail was carved. Whoever is doing these things are good... But just a point for thought - could it be a possibility that the original keris pandai made the keris like that - make the billet for the keris, and add material to the gandik for the singa? |
11th December 2006, 02:36 PM | #34 |
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Hey, my avatar's gone missing!!
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11th December 2006, 02:45 PM | #35 |
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Here's my other singa barong, from Palembang. I'm pretty sure this was not messed with and is an old singa barong. I couldn't see any forge lines flowing from the singa to the blade though. The grain flows from the nose, down the body to the rump.
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11th December 2006, 08:44 PM | #36 |
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Could it have been made that way in the first place?
Anything is possible. I have the couple of blades I have already mentioned, but I also have a Bali blade where the head part of the naga has been put in place after the blade was forged. I do not know if this is a later addition, or was done when the blade was made, but close examination of material and style seems to indicate it might have been done at the time of making the blade. From what I have been told, and what I myself have observed, the "improvement" of older blades has been going on for a very, very long time. It would seem that in times past there were a lot of very big Tuban blades available in Jawa. These blades used to sell at very good prices, and were in high demand. Why? Because they were perfect for alteration to various other forms of blade that could be sold for multiples of the original cost. They were so big that a length could be cut from the tip and welded onto the gandik, thus giving sufficient thickness to allow a naga's head or a singo barong to be carved.The material was the same:- not so easy to pick that it had been fiddled with. I do not think that we are talking about "---whoever is doing these things---" being good. We are talking about "whoever did these things" being good. To the best of my knowledge, this form of alteration is something from the distant past.It was probably still going on in the 1960's, but I believe most of this sort of work was done pre WWII.Even if we accept the 1960's as a cutoff date, that is stretching things a bit, because of political and social conditions in Jawa at that time.It is probably more realistic to think in terms of preWWII for all of these. In the 1970's another form of alteration became obvious in the market place. This involved the afore mentioned welding of material to the gandik, and the reshaping, but the weld joints were then covered up with kinatah work. I believe most if not all of these came from only one maker. And yes, the people who did these alterations were very, very skilled. I personally believe that these alterations that demonstrate a high degree of skill are worth keeping for their own sake. However, the problem is to identify them. It really can be tremendously difficult to find the weld joint indicating that an alteration has been done. Under normal buying conditions it unlikely that you will find it, it is only later when you can get it under magnification and good light that you might be able to find the joint, and even then you need experience, knowledge and to know exactly what you are looking for.The blade must be in stain to give a reasonable chance at detection, you must be able to move the blade under good light, and you need good magnification. Then you need to know what metal grain looks like, which is perhaps not so simple as one might think. |
13th December 2006, 05:04 AM | #37 |
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Hi Kai Wee. Could you post a photo of the entire blade for this lasr one.
Do you have an idea of the age on this one? |
14th December 2006, 04:11 PM | #38 | |
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Quote:
Ok sure, I'll do that this weekend. This keris looks like late 19th century or early 20th century to me, judging from the extent of wear on the blade (not a very reliable guide though). |
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17th December 2006, 02:34 AM | #39 |
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Oh, silly me. Didn't realize that I've already posted pictures of the singa barong on kampungnet.
http://www.kampungnet.com.sg/modules...view_album.php |
17th December 2006, 01:38 PM | #40 |
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Thanks Kai Wee.
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