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Old Yesterday, 05:11 PM   #20
RobT
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 586
Default You Get Some Things Right and Some Things Wrong

First, what I got right.
Here are photos of me wearing the first of the seven examples I initially presented in this thread (the only one with a complete suspension and belt).
The first photo shows left side carry with the throat decoration plainly visible and my right hand poised to draw the sword. Note the position of the sheath with the throat angled towards the front and the tip angled towards the rear. Also note the position of the belt buckle on the front of my body.
The second photo shows right side carry with the throat decoration plainly visible and my right hand in position to attempt to draw the sword. As you can see, any such attempt would be awkward at best because the throat of the sheath (and thus the hilt) is angled toward the back of the wearer. (Even a left hand draw would be difficult and then, the sword would have to be transferred to the right hand for use because most Filipinos, like the rest of the world, are right handed.) The position of the tip of the sheath projecting as it does in front of the wearer doesn’t pose any functional problem, it just looks silly.
The third photo is another right side carry view which shows the position of the belt buckle as being needlessly difficult to fasten and undo.
There are only two ways this sheath could be used for right side carry. One, the throat decoration must face the user’s body (which would seem to obviate any reason for the decoration in the first place). The second way would be to change the angle of the suspension so that the ring and leather strap now nearest the throat would be furthest from the throat and the ring and strap now furthest from the throat would be nearest to the throat. The buckle and belt strap components would also have to swap their respective positions. All of the above would result ln a sheath suitable for right side carry and left hand cross draw which would be impractical for the reason already covered above. Note that the suspensions on ALL the examples in this thread are aligned for left side carry (see new photo with my examples [with complete sheaths] sheathed).

Now, what I got wrong...sigh.
Given the above, it is obvious that I was wrong and Lee was right about the orientation of his knife as sheathed being incorrect. To be correct, the curve of the hilt would have to face the suspension ring nearest the throat. As shown in my carry photos above, the hilt must be curved or configured to support a right hand cross draw from a sheath on the left side. The hilt to blade orientation of Lee’s knife is correct (switching the existing orientation would be absurd both ergonomically and visually). So we are left with a knife not original to the sheath and of unknown origin but, since there is nothing about the style, construction, or materials that is inconsistent with Philippine manufacture, and there is not one shred of hard evidence pointing toward manufacture anywhere else, my money is still on the Philippines.


Sincerely,
RobT
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Last edited by RobT; Yesterday at 05:16 PM. Reason: typo
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