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Sure, but if we see swords merely as works of art, and not as weapons, well - why not collect paintings or statues or somesuch? Or, we could for instance buy swords that are merely "lookers", made in soft, untempered steel. |
There are people who do collect paintings and statues, swords just happen to be some peoples cups of tea :) And you can buy sword like objects, but in my eyes this is similar to someone that would buy a print of a painting, or a cheap casting taken from a existing statue. There is nothing wrong with doing such, and when browsing the interwebs you can find tons and tons of these. Why? Because they sell, and there are people out there who are perfectly content with these items.
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Many speak of CNC, but is it not the intent of the maker, as much as his or her means, which defines the end product? As Maurizio said, CNC-made swords are hand-finished anyway. So I'd be inclined to think that symmetrical perfection, which some see as cold and others might see as beautiful, is achieved in great part by hand (which speaks volumes about the technical skill of the makers). |
In regard to CNC blades, I've seen CNC blades that have plenty of flaws, and truth be told when you hand grind a CNCed blade on a fresh 60 grit belt you are basically taking all of that "nice perfect machining" and pitching it out the window. Add the deflection of the material from machining stresses, the distortion from heat treat, and you have a good amount of work that needs to happen to get the blade back to straight prior to grinding. Of course it is less work then forging a blank, however it is a modern technique that allows you to purchase a fine blade for a price less then a totally handmade blade.
If you saw two identical swords (of your liking, either symmetrically perfect or not) in every way that you could detect by your naturally given senses, and one was CNCed and the other was handmade, and you couldn't determine which was which, and the only difference was the price, would one still seem "cold" or would this challenge to redefine your individual standards of evaluation?