I've attached a couple of pictures, but my pictures do not do justice to the visual impact of the sword; it's stunning.
Moreover, from the website you don't get a sense of how good Mr. Burridge's customer service is. He keeps in touch with his customers by email from order to delivery. In my case, the sword arrived with a slight bend due to some serious shipping damage. When I mentioned this in an email, Mr. Burridge got in touch with me by phone (UK to US) and walked me through a fix (which worked.)
The sword is bronze, of course, but picking it up there's no doubt you're holding a well made weapon. The sword is sharp enough to slice paper held freely in the other hand.
I did some light cutting with the sword and was surprised by its cutting ability. Against light cardboard and plastic milk jugs it cuts quite well; I haven't tried it against harder targets. I happened to have a Cold Steel 1796 Light Cavalry Saber for comparison, and although the much larger saber was a better cutter, the bronze sword was a lot closer in cutting ability than I'd have guessed. I have several steel swords from Hanwei, including an early model Hanwei Shinto Katana, that, to my surprise, cut worse than my new bronze blade. (Of course, all of this is subject to my own mediocre skill level.)
The balance of the sword is well forward, about 6 inches from the hilt. The blade is just over 20 inches long and almost 2 inches across the widest point of the leaf-blade. Being bronze, it is heavier than a steel sword of the same dimensions, but at 1 pound, 14 ounces it does not feel too heavy by any stretch. Recovery after a cut is quick. The handle is compact, with a large wooden pommel. It's a cramped grip, but not impossible; similar to the grip on some Viking swords.
In terms of workmanship, the handle is well made and solid; hard wood (oak?) riveted with bronze pins. The blade is just amazing. There are a few tiny surface features that show that the blade was cast by hand, but the over-all effect is very attractive and the precision of the blade's shape and of the edge is amazing.
As I found out, the fact that the blade is bronze does mean that it's subject to taking a set if bent, more easily than a well tempered European style steel sword. But it's also fairly easy to straighten. The blade does have some spring to it and will return to true from a fair bit of bending, but it does take a set more easily than well tempered steel (but not as easily as poorly tempered steel.)
This is a hand-made sword, and the price listed on Mr. Burridge's web site is £240, which comes to about US$400. Adding the cost of the superb sharpening and shipping to the US upped to cost a fair bit, but I still think it was a good deal when compared to steel swords of equal quality.



