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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 1,209
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David,
Very good question. The blades where older blades indeed and mostly not top-notch blades. In my opinion and that's why you see them so much here in Holland is that these dresses were purely made for bringback gifts for mainly the Dutch soldiers and other Dutch employees in those days. In my opinion the Maduran owned keris in their proper maduran dress and not in dress of lower quality wood, that was used for these bringback kerisses. |
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#2 | |
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Vikingsword Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,376
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Quote:
look at the extravagant carving of the Donoriko hilts ! If this sheer exuberance in the carver's art can be practiced in this medium then why not in the Wrongkos and Gandars of Madura keris ? So I would disagree that these were purely "Visitor" oriented works . Visitor influenced, perhaps; or was it assimilation into the culture ? |
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 1,209
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Rick,
There are carved maduran wrongko's en gandars and if i remembered well in a thread about maduran scabbards a wrongko with lying lion is shown. In that case i completely agree with you. But the keris type we are discussing here are dressed in lesser quality wood which makes quicker carving possible. This quality wouldnt be the choice of a maduran for his kerisblade. |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Italy
Posts: 928
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Another carved madura wrongko
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,085
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Henk, you're a better man than me.
I simply cannot tell with any certainty the quality of the wood in chregu's scabbard. What I can see is a reasonably close grained wood that supports a reasonably fine carving pattern, the scabbard is old, but the pattern of the carving has not collapsed; the wood looks as if it has been stained black, but the area on the hilt where it has worn through seems to have a reddish colour, so it is possible that this wood might be sawo, which does have similar grain and support characteristics, if it is sawo, it is not a low quality wood, but quite a respectable wood. If the wood has not been stained black, it might be sono--- but it doesn't really look like sono---and again, sono is a decent wood. Since you have been able to detect that this is a low quality wood, could you please tell us how you were able to know this from the photos. Thanks. |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 1,209
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Alan,
That is really to much honor. As i mentioned before, you couldn't enter an auction house or fleemarket here in Holland without stumbling over these soldier keris. Sometimes just 10 in a box. If you had a lot of more keris in an auction house 10 to 1 you had 1 or 2 of such keris among them. It is certainly not detecting the quality of wood from a picture as handling these keris so many times that it is not hard to recognize this kind of keris and recalling the quality of wood on all these keris. I would be very surprised when the wood of Chregu's scabbard would be of a different wood quality than the scabbards of these type of keris. On the keris Marcokeris is showing us, i will not give any comment on the scabbard simply because i cann't. And to be honest, i owned both of these soldier keris shown here by Chregu and Rick in this thread. Sometimes it drove me to madness discovering again a soldier keris among the few keris i bought. Just reselling and hoping it wouldn't take too long before someone was willing to buy it. I sold them all accept one with a lying lion wrongko. Today i regret i didn't kept such a keris as Chregru is showing. Regrets because i realize more and more the historical period these keris represent. But i'm convinced today or tomorrow i will stumble against such a keris like Chregru's for fish and chips because here in Holland these keris are still considered as the first tourist items brought back by our soldiers. So Alan, it is not that i am able detecting woodquality from a picture, in that case i would be rich and famous, but the expierence of handling these keris through the years. |
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#7 | |
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Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,250
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Quote:
). I recall once seeing a particularly fine example that surpasses these ones by far, but i haven't come across it in my quick search. So all i can think is that maybe you have just been looking in the wrong boxes at flea markets all these years.
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 1,209
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David,
I almost should say that this is the problem of this international forum and i hesitate to react on these kerisses. Actually i regret my reaction and opinion. Telling me looking in the wrong boxes on flee markets and you forget the auction houses here in Holland and looking at the pictures you are showing me, i understand that i cann't make clear to you what i mean. Probably you will never understand it, because you're not Dutch. I'm afraid only a Dutch can understand what i mean. I wished the Dutch soldiers brought keris back home of that quality. Almost every Dutch family who had a relative serving in The East, was surprised with a soldier keris of the quality i mentioned like the two shown in this thread. Most of these keris ended in the attic or shed or behind a cupboard. Cleaning up those places because grandpa or grandma passed away was also the moment to get rid of that thing and try to get some money for it. At a certain moment these keris popped up in every place you can imagine. This is my last post on this subject. it cost me to much time and energy. |
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#9 | |
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Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,250
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Quote:
My statement about looking in the wrong boxes at flea markets was punctuated with a wink and a smile. It was meant in jest. I am sorry that you missed the joke.
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