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Old 1st September 2005, 11:08 PM   #1
kai
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Red face

Sorry, measurements to follow soon...
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Old 2nd September 2005, 12:07 AM   #2
kai
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Question Faux pas?

BTW, I assume that this keris is Makassarese? If so, is it politically correct to pigeon-hole it as a "Keris Bugis" or is there a more suitable catch-all term?
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Old 2nd September 2005, 03:08 AM   #3
Alam Shah
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Hi Kai,

The blade looks like a javanese patrem with it's thin and longer ganja.
It looks as though it was reshaped from a longer piece. The pamor lines
does not flow with the luks.
(I have a javanese patrem, of a different form. See here).

The blade and the sandang walikat sheath form looks complementary to each other.

In your assembly, the hilt and pendokok (hilt cup) looks a little 'out of place'.
Without the longer 'neck' of the pendokok, the hilt would probably would not
fit the entire length of the peksi. The hulu and pendokok is of the Sulawesi (Celebes) form.

I have a short Sulawesi keris with a mini tebeng-styled sheath. See it here.
(The sheath is complementary to the form. But don't follow my pendokok . Wrong styled. Mine is a peninsular styled pendokok.)

Nevertheless, should you decide to change the sheath, I would recommend a tebeng-styled sheath or another Sulawesi form (see here).

Feel free to disagree.
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Old 2nd September 2005, 03:59 PM   #4
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Kai, Alam Shah is right. The blade is a javanese one. Javanese blades were highly apreciated so it is no surprise that you see javanese blades mounted as a buginese keris.

But i don't think yours is a bugis. The walikat sandang sheath is more javanese and the uikiran is too large for this blade. I guess that the previous owner replaced it. Maybe you can find a small ukiran for a patrem to complete its javanese origin.
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Old 3rd September 2005, 02:40 AM   #5
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A Jogya styled sheath, hulu and mendak would look nice and elegant for your piece. Just a suggestion. (See my example).
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Old 4th September 2005, 04:52 AM   #6
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Default electrolytic rust removal

Hello Kai,
Could you describe the process of electrolytic rust removal or direct me to a source of information for same? I would really like to try out the method.
Sincerely,
RobT
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Old 4th September 2005, 11:35 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RobT
Could you describe the process of electrolytic rust removal or direct me to a source of information for same?
Hi Rob,

I just started a new thread on this method so that others can join in...
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?p=14089

Regards,
Kai
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Old 5th September 2005, 12:34 AM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Henk
But i don't think yours is a bugis. The walikat sandang sheath is more javanese and the uikiran is too large for this blade.
Hi Henk,

What kind of wood would this be if of Javanese origin? (It's carved pretty crudely and the wood is very light.) AFAIK, there are no pines on Jawa but they are native to Sulawesi (mountain peaks)...

As given above, the blade is really stubby. The Sulawesi hilt is of average size, give or take. The whole assembly is feels more like a Moro gunong than the more graceful keris patrem I've seen pics of!

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Kai
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Old 5th September 2005, 12:16 AM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alam Shah
The blade looks like a javanese patrem with it's thin and longer ganja. It looks as though it was reshaped from a longer piece. The pamor lines does not flow with the luks.
Thanks, mas Alam! I've been wondering about the pamor flow, too. However, if the shortening would have been done in Jawa, why were the original shape modified, especially since this can't be hidden with a pamor miring blade?

Quote:
In your assembly, the hilt and pendokok (hilt cup) looks a little 'out of place'. Without the longer 'neck' of the pendokok, the hilt would probably would not fit the entire length of the peksi.
Yup, the peksi is 53 mm (2.1") long. The blade is only 175 mm (6.9")!

Quote:
Feel free to disagree.
No need to, I guess...

Regards,
Kai
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Old 6th September 2005, 01:01 AM   #10
Alam Shah
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kai
Thanks, mas Alam! I've been wondering about the pamor flow, too. However, if the shortening would have been done in Jawa, why were the original shape modified, especially since this can't be hidden with a pamor miring blade?

Yup, the peksi is 53 mm (2.1") long. The blade is only 175 mm (6.9")!

Regards,
Kai
This is just a guess. For a keris to be used for a boy or woman, it would be cheaper to do the modification from an existing blade than commissioning a new piece (a patrem). For the sheath, it might be a "make-do" piece to accommodate the new form (after mod.).

Last edited by Alam Shah; 6th September 2005 at 03:40 AM. Reason: grammar
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Old 6th September 2005, 01:26 AM   #11
kai
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alam Shah
This is just a guess. For a keris to be used for a boy or woman, it would be cheaper to do the modification from an existing blade than commissioning a new piece (a patrem).
This would be a severe breach of rule #1: Never cheap out on your wife...

What I meant though: Why would one want to narrow down the original luks and thereby messing with the pamor miring instead of just shortening the blade?

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Kai
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Old 6th September 2005, 04:23 AM   #12
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Default stealth use...

I guess, smaller blade is easier to conceal and use, for women (or men), in close quarters engagement. That's what patrems are for.
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