The siblings of the weapon featured in that article are on display at the Walters Museum in Baltimore and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Those are the three I know of, though there may be more.
I started out making the hilt without a specific plan for the blade, but the new owner saw my process shots on facebook and wanted to have the final weapon be as close to the original dimensions and details as possible with a blade for HEMA.
We contacted Sam Yankovic at Castille Armory, and he agreed to make a custom blade to match my drawings, constructed so he could give it his regular 10 year guarantee against breakage. The result is a very nice blade with a diamond cross section all the way down the length (rather than what appears to be a lenticular cross section on the original), nice beefy rounded edges, and a rounded point to accept a rubber blunt.
Much to my surprise the final weight of my re-creation is 2.65 lbs, just a hair under the 2.7lbs of the original documented in the article i mentioned above. The sword balances 2.25" in front of the hilt with a 35 3/4" long blade. It's 42" overall. The guard and pommel are blued steel and the grip is carved hardwood covered in leather and wire. The pommel has an ovoid cross section, so it's keyed to the tang to prevent rotation. The hilt is secured with a recessed allen nut.
www.jessebelsky.com/stageswords















