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Damian Sulowski wrote: |
Hello my friends. I want to show you our last work. It was a special order that gave us a lot of emotions. It is a sword type X from X-XIth. century.
The blade is type 5 in Geibig's classification. It is a long, big blade and it has incredible blow strength. All elements are full handmade - forged blade, holes in the crossguard and pommel forged in a traditional way and a socketforged by hand from sheet of metal. Photos of the process you could seen in my posts. The pattern on the scabbard was carved in 3D way. without the punches with a ready pattern and without ready-made rollers. I hope you will enjoy our work - I invite you to fallow our page and to share this post. Viking sword type X Full functional, made with high quality steel 51CrV4 (6150) Hardened 54HRC, Total lenght: 100,5cm, Blade lenght: 86cm, Blade width at the base: 5cm, Balance: 14,5cm, Grip lenght: 10cm, Weight 1250g, Edge is sharp movie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJrGwKa1h3g more photos: http://historicalswordszone.com/viking-sword-type-x/ |
Damian Sulowski wrote: |
Let me introduce you to "The Wild Ivy" - Sword type XXa
It is very beautiful sword inpired on the historical find from XVth century from series Castillon Swords. The sword is full handmade with traditional methods. Total lenght: 111,5cm Blade width at the base: 4,4cm Blade lenght: 91cm Balance: 10cm Weight: 1259g Grip lenght: 10,8cm Edge is sharp Full functional, made with high quality steel 51CrV4 (6150), Hardened 54HRC historicalswordszone.com #sword #sulowskidamian #medieval #XXa #swordmaker #scabbard #armoury #handmade #custom |
Jeremiah Swanger wrote: | ||
I am very impressed by the virtually-seamless transition from the fuller to the spine. It is difficult to exactly locate where one ends and the other begins-- it simply flows from one to the other. You have always had a good eye for lines, shapes, and proportions, but this latest work of yours, I believe, perfectly illustrates how your attention to detail has steadily evolved from merely "excellent" to "impeccable!" |
Daniel Parry wrote: |
That's really lovely. Which original did you base it on in terms of dimensions, balance, flex etc ? |