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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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Sham wootz is characterized by low contrast/less complex pattern, and I think your blade is sham. The reason I think the blade is original is because of it's geometry/curvature. The smith could re-forge it from another broken blade.. but why? it'd be so much easier to create it by stock removal, i.e. grinding... I assume by "reforging" you meant metallurgical process, not mechanical reshape. I doubt the smiths used metallurgical reforge of broken blades much for the above reason. No, that was not my gurage on eBay. That was another Alex's:-) |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,712
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Thanks Alex for yours thoughts, The blade is heavily scrached which I think hides much of the pattern in the photos which seems quite swirly to me in hand reflected in sunlight? But Time will tell.
![]() Havent found my 16X loupe yet, not where I thought it was. ![]() But in the meantime herse a little cleanup around what I presumed is the top of a cartouche. ![]() The crazed area in front of that looks like reforging to me or is perhaps just overheating ? But together whith the remains of a cartouche I still think reforging is likley. As for a smiths reasons why its conjecture, but forging is always better than stock removal for quality of structure, & often speeds up the process as well I would say from seeing how fast a kukri is forged out of a rough billet in Nepal. Pity the gurade wasnt yours, I think its its the nicest one Ive ever seen! Spiral |
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,712
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Which in that case is presumably why the crazed area in front of the gold cartouche tip, is as it is?
Spiral |
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