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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Jean-Carle Hudon
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 12:27 pm Post subject: sword identity game |
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Give us a clue : is this one of those swords that some maker, who will remain nameless, took forever to finish and deliver to a discouraged customer ?
Bon coeur et bon bras
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 12:38 pm Post subject: Re: sword identity game |
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Jean-Carle Hudon wrote: | Give us a clue : is this one of those swords that some maker, who will remain nameless, took forever to finish and deliver to a discouraged customer ? |
Give the name of the maker lol... but his name is not "Peter"
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Johannes Zenker
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 12:39 pm Post subject: |
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Well if it's a fake someone took a nice sword reproduction and ruined it. It's got more distal taper than I'd expect from a repro you'd be willing to convert into a fake relic. I'm still more on the fake side of things.
The pommel shape does look somewhat modern... The perfectly rectangular socket of the pommel is kinda suspect to me as well.
The corrosion appears to be very even along the entirety of the sword, and for its colour I think it ought to be in worse shape overall, yet the crossguard seems to be absolutely snug to the blade.
Some of the edge damage also jars with the rest of the sword. Very pronounced and jagged. Kinda what I'd expect of a Del Tin that is used for forceful stage fights.
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Sam Barris
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 1:40 pm Post subject: |
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I'm going to go with a pretty decent quality replica that someone did a pretty decent job of aging, perhaps for decorative purposes. I agree with the previous comment that the edge damage looks like something that occurred during theatrical use (I have a friend who used a replica in that way during a high school play, and it looks similar). It also seems, well, recent. On a related note, there seems to be bare metal peeking out from the patina in several places, including on the nicks. I would not expect that on something that was really as old as this sword would be were it genuine.
Pax,
Sam Barris
"Any nation that draws too great a distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards, and its fighting done by fools." —Thucydides
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Mark Moore
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 5:51 pm Post subject: |
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I'm wanting to say it's an original. But, if it's a fake, it's a pretty damn good one. .....McM
''Life is like a box of chocolates...'' --- F. Gump
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Craig Peters
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 7:32 pm Post subject: |
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As others have observed, the pommel looks funny. The width of the inner circle pommel in proportion to the pommel as a whole looks more like something I have seen on modern swords. The mass of the sword at 1.4 kg seems a bit high. While not damning in itself, I notice the lack of inlay, which can still be seen on swords of this Type (XV.1, 5, 6 of Records, for instance). So I think it's a fake, too.
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Tim Harris
Industry Professional
Location: Melbourne, Australia Joined: 06 Sep 2006
Posts: 168
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 9:57 pm Post subject: |
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Hmmm Del Tin ... this sword model is not in their catalog. Another suggestion. Nobody has seen this model in a recent blacksmith?
Blows in the blade (weak parts) seem recent. Maybe a child who played?
The hits on the strong part are not similar ....
Exact pommel is abnormal. It does not match the type of blade and guard. He even seems to miss a rivet on the head of the pommel. It's as if we had reforged the pommel. But if it's a good fake reproduction why put an incoherent pommel?
Real, Historismus or fake ... You seem to say that it is still well done. Maybe other pictures ...?
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Craig Peters
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Posted: Wed 04 Jul, 2018 10:55 pm Post subject: |
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Xavier Nihoul wrote: |
Exact pommel is abnormal. It does not match the type of blade and guard. |
I thought of this, Xavier. I noticed that many of the swords in Records have Type K or Type J pommels that are recessed, rather than projecting like this one. However, the XV in the Wallace Collection seems to have a projecting pommel similar to this one. Since my main reference book for swords of this time is Records, I was not sure how common pommels of this type are on surviving XV swords. The fact that there seems to be at least one example made the argument that the pommel does fit seem a bit weak.
Did you have other ideas about it not matching the blade and guard?
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Paul Watson
Location: Upper Hutt, New Zealand Joined: 08 Feb 2006
Posts: 395
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Posted: Thu 05 Jul, 2018 2:30 am Post subject: |
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There's no pinching of the tang where it inserts into the pommel. Also the tang looks too consistent in thickness to be a genuine antique.
I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, but that which it protects. (Faramir, The Two Towers)
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Johannes Zenker
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Posted: Thu 05 Jul, 2018 2:46 pm Post subject: |
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'm not quite sure what you're getting at.
Aside from the odd pommel shape (especially the seemingly flat-ground peen setion) there's nothing about this that absolutely contradicts the "good maker" hypothesis. Distal taper is there, measurements are okay, fitting is well within plausible parameters (aside from maybe some very sharp rectangular cuts), edge damage would be result of harsh treatment/mistreatment (with the caveat that all edge damage seems to have been received perpendicular to the blade, which might indicate deliberate action), and the maker's mark in the shape of a well-preserved copper or brass inlay doesn't seem too outlandish as well.
Also: are those rusted-in fingerprints on the tang? If so, that makes me believe that it was held by the bare tang before artificial aging.
The "bright" peaks between corroded-away valleys/pits all along the blade are also highly suspect.
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Craig Johnson
Industry Professional
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Posted: Fri 06 Jul, 2018 9:05 am Post subject: Bits |
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Hmm, I think I would be wary of this for a couple of specifics reasons. I would not want to make a judgement until I had it in hand but definitely a couple of points for serious questions to be asked. What is the COG?
Craig
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Posted: Fri 06 Jul, 2018 11:06 am Post subject: |
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Pob approximatly 8cm from the guard
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Tom King
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Posted: Sun 08 Jul, 2018 4:50 pm Post subject: |
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95% sure fake.
mainly because the edges look like damage from slamming that guy against another metal thing, not from corrosion. Organic erosion, even if it is sharp and V shaped in places usually feels organic. The few pics showing rolled dents are telling.
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Zach Gordon
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Posted: Mon 09 Jul, 2018 8:15 am Post subject: |
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Real.
Red rust can come back into view on an old sword. The knicks, from striking a sharp object can be real. The edge looks like it was sharpened with a stone, rare on a fake. The cross is weird to be inlaid with a latten metal, but if you know enough to do all the other stuff, why would you chose to put something weird like that in, fakers go for normal?
It also is so correct, and perfect, and then the guard/pommel are off center, you see this on originals not good fakes. Im going with original!
Z
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Xavier Nihoul
Location: Belgium Joined: 01 Jul 2018
Posts: 21
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Posted: Mon 09 Jul, 2018 9:01 am Post subject: |
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really funny and in the same time worrisome.
A little comparison between two swords from a different age can give an answer?
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Chris Dayton
Location: Austin, TX Joined: 29 Oct 2017
Posts: 67
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Posted: Thu 12 Jul, 2018 1:18 pm Post subject: |
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So what's the answer? I am not experienced enough with real medieval artifacts to be able to tell which of these (your first one or the two for comparison above) are real and which are fake. For my own education I would love to know, especially if there's proof such as demonstrated use of an identifiable modern repro.
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