Alan - a question. In your paper you write about the first Luk: 
 
"Similarly, the first wave counted is not a wave in the blade either; it is a slight undulation that  
occurs on only one side of the blade. When the maker of the blade is forging it to shape he bends the  
forging away from and then back towards the wadidang side of the blade to create the first true wave in  
the blade:- a blade wave has two sides to it, a negative (concave) side, and a positive (convex) side. The  
current convention used in counting blade waves ignores this fact and counts a slight undulation above  
the gandhik as the first wave, and the straight section of blade at its point as the final wave." 
 
As I understand it, it says, the first real bending occurs on the second Luk, on Wadidang side. So the first Luk would be shaped by carving? 
 
Why the Adeg-like grain we see in this blade clearly bends away and then back to Gandhik side of the blade (between the blue lines in my picture), so the very first commonly counted Luk appears to be done by bending?
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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