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			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Ann Arbor, MI 
				
				
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			Following our discussion of questionable Kindjals, I just wanted to show the one that exemplifies both the sophistication and the gall of modern "industry" 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...MEWA:IT&ih=012 On a small picture it appears kinda good. Then you start looking... 1. The silver fitting at the bottom of the scabbard has a name of the master: Omarov. Very famous owner of a workshop in Vladikavkaz end of the 19th-beginning of the 20th centuries. But... he never wrote his name down at that place or using a niello technique( always on the blade and deeply struck); handwriting is undescribably crude; the name is spelled without a "yat" at the end ( orthography post 1918). Obvious fake. 2. Look at the back of the scabbard: do you see faint whitish lines? This is a trace of the modern technique, when the ornament is transfered to the metal using photography ( for further embellishment) 3. The niello on the front of the scabbard is put using photographic outline ( like a sticker) 4. The hallmark is fake: no initials or Greek letter, the head is all wrong and the font of "84" is wrong. If this is "sterling silver", my cat is a lion. 5. The blade is obviously old and totally out of sync with the new-ish state of the scabbard. A $3 bill is a genuine article in comparison! I do not know who the "private bidder" was, but he overpayed ~ $959.01  | 
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