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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 400
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thanks for your explanation, I see why I don't collect them. I also see there are two groups that collect kerisses, the first who are the fanatic real keris lovers and are honering them as weapons. The second group collect them as art object and don't want to change anything. I'm in between somewhere I think but should rather buy from the second group. |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Singapore
Posts: 1,180
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Great job Detlef!
![]() Now the keris looks the way it is meant to be. A dark (aggressive) old hilt, sheath with warm and glowing red finish. You now have a good old tajong in desirable condition. Welcome to the club, Detlef! ![]() |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,216
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Hello Arjan and Willem,
I can understand your point of view very well since I collect also artefacts from "primitive" cultures and I have a feeling for "dirt" patina. ![]() What you will do when you have a old Mandau sheat and the very fine rattan bindings are not to seen under a big coat from "dirt-patina"? But sometimes I have a keris with both sort of patina and I conclude that I only polish the sheat a little bit and let it in this state, see the pictures. Or I only polish the front side of the sheat and let the back in "original" state. Best regards, Detlef Last edited by Sajen; 7th May 2010 at 06:21 PM. |
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#4 | |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,216
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,019
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Arjan, as I have already said, I have no desire to argue against personal preference, if your personal preference is for dirt, then I support without question your right to wallow in dirt.
I would also comment that I did not compare ethnographic objects with furniture, however, had I done so, this would have been a very valid comparison, as furniture is one of the defining items of any culture, and ethnography is not limited to the primitive. My mention of furniture was to demonstrate the correct usage of the word "patina", I was not in any way drawing a comparison between furniture and anything else. In respect of the use of steel wool. I think David has probably corrected your misunderstanding here, but I will comment further. 0000 steel wool is a very fine grade of wool, it has very little cut, and it is quite safe for an experienced person to use on most surfaces. For example, the finish of a quality piano could have 32 or more layers of polish, if that piano has not been well maintained some of that finish might be cracked, but often those cracks do not extend all the way through the finish, so it becomes necessary to remove a little of the outside polish. This is not a job for an inexperienced person, but a craftsman undertaking such a restoration would use 0000 steel wool in preference to a cloth rubber, simply because of economics of time. Once the necessary cut has been achieved the final polish would be with a different medium. Please note here that I am talking about very much finer work than is ever necessary with the polished wooden surfaces of weapon scabbards. 0000 steel wool does produce a faster result when it is necessary to cut back a surface, and there are other agents that are used by craftsmen that also have an abrasive effect, such as pumice, rottenstone, even toothpaste and talcum powder, but a degree of experience with these materials is necessary before they can be used safely and to maximum effect. The advice I gave to Detlef is the product of my own 50 odd years involved in the restoration and finishing of wooden surfaces, and the foundations for that experience came from 3 generations of cabinet makers. People who collect keris do so for a number of reasons, it is not just as "keris lovers", nor as people who regard the keris as an art object. However, of those who do regard the keris as an art object, it seems that the vast bulk of these people want their art objects in absolutely immaculate condition. Where they acquire a very good keris that is in very poor condition, invariably that keris will be restored, it will never be left in a deteriorated condition and with an uncleaned and unstained blade. Arjan, I respect your personal standards and personal preferences, and I would never argue against your right to hold these standards and preferences, but your position is very much at variance with the ethic of keris culture. |
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Singapore
Posts: 1,180
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![]() Arjan - we are not making an attack on you, just sharing what we normally do in keris collecting circles. ![]() |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 400
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Arjan - we are not making an attack on you, just sharing what we normally do in keris collecting circles.
![]() Oh , don't worry I didn't felt like an attack, I just like the converstation! I was just a little concerned,that's all.... ![]() |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2017
Posts: 90
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Two afternoons ago, as I was curled up under my blanket in a foetal position, I decided that if I ever took up the activity commonly referred to as "tagging", (not exactly the same as "graffiti", but close enough), the first thing I'd write/spraypaint on the highway overpass would be "Non-gender-specific third person singular English pronoun NOW". Your upper left photo posted at 04:54 leaves me as firmly convinced as I was three days ago that I'd be morally right in spraypainting that phrase anywhere, not just on a highway overpass. The first language I learned doesn't have this pronoun problem. Although I don't know for certain, and I may be wrong, the hilt figure "looks masculine", and I have to say "he" looks very, very happy now, compared to before. "He" looks nothing less than restored to life. "He" was really, truly deserving of the effort you put forth, and I'm pleased to the point of tears to see that you did right by "him". I thank you, on "his" behalf, and on behalf of those who were before and those who will come after myself.
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