As you can easily figure out looking at many of my previous posts, I have been fascinated with the study of the balance of swords, and hand-held weapons in general, for quite a long time. At this stage of my studies, I think I would profit immensely from actual data measured on antique weapons.
The measurements I need are mainly of two sorts: geometry and mass distribution. The only ways I know of measuring mass distribution require handling. Light handling, that is, so nothing putting the object in danger. Just locating the center of gravity and a few pivot points.
Of course I could go on nagging everyone owning antiques to obtain measurements :), but as the saying goes, if you want a job done, do it yourself. Plus, I would be able to correlate my own perception of handling with the measurements I get, which in itself is valuable information.
Fortunately, I live just a few dozen miles away from the French Musée de l'Armée, which has one of the richest collection in Europe. I was especially thrilled when I last visited the museum, to see that they had a room called the Arsenal, which they present on their website as a "visible reserve", and which is indeed filled by plenty of swords and armour that were not deemed worthy of better display, but that would be perfect for me to measure. As an illustration, I attached a poor shot of some of those (sorry for the quality, I was zooming through a window, with light right in front of me, not the best conditions).
I'm quite sure I'm not the first person thinking of going into a museum to handle antiques (especially on these forums ;) ). I'm however completely unsure of how one should organize such things... And of how museums respond to such requests.
I'm not an art student, nor an historian. I do not have any professional interest in swords. I'm a hobbyist, and my only reason for my inquiry is in fact pure curiosity. I wonder if a museum lets anyone who asks enter, but I suspect it is no the case. I do however have a strong scientific background (starting a PhD), so I can detail my intended manipulations in depth, if need be. In fact, it's indeed possible that I use some applied mathematics methods (which is right in my field) to analyze the results.
So, I'm interested in members' experience about all this. Who did you contact? What reasons, if any, did you give? How did it go? What were you allowed to do? What did you bring with you (I'm thinking gloves are a good idea)? And of course if anyone was able to handle weapons from this exact museum...
Regards


The Arsenal.


A wall of the Arsenal, with many swords...