Quote:
Originally Posted by A. G. Maisey
I believe the people who are taking part in this conversation are aware that I deal, ie, I buy and sell keris.
I also have very extensive experience and many contacts in the dealer network in Indonesia, that stretch back over 40 years.
Perhaps it might be as well to note that a dealer will often discover that the name of something is what a number of his buyers would like it to be.
Never forget:- the customer is always right.
And this applies doubly in Indonesia.
Many dealers, especially Indonesian dealers, are extremely knowledgeable, but that does not mean that what they tell their customers is necessarily what they themselves know, or believe, to be accurate.
In Jawa you simply do not find a lot of big kemuning trees, thus it is not regarded as a wrongko wood, but rather as a wood for jejeran. Outside Jawa in the Peninsula, and probably Kalimantan, it seems there are more big kemuning trees, so it is used for wrongkos, because sometimes you do get nginden (chatoyant) grain in kemuning.
Another quite common wood that is used in Jawa for wrongkos, and has distinct similarities to kemuning is akasia.
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Yes, without doubt you are right. I am a little bit younger than you, don't have spend so many time in Indonesia and mainly my treasury of words in bahasa indonesia is very bordered and my knowledge of keris is extremely limited but this is something I have learned.
So I take it as fact that when you have a javanese/madurese wrongko with a grain like this it will be mainly from trembalu or one of the other woods you mentioned. And the wrongkos from Peninsula as well Bugis wrongkos most of the time from kemuning. Thank's again for the time you spend by this.
Regards,
Detlef