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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 173
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I'm 61, and collect ethographic edge weapons by 12 years.
Paolo |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 478
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two years on the high side of a half century
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#3 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: OKLAHOMA, USA
Posts: 3,138
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MY MIND IS 20 BUT MY BODY IS A VERY HARD USED 66.
![]() THERE IS STILL HOPE FOR YOUNGER COLLECTORS AS THE INTEREST IS STILL THERE IN ARMS AND ARMOR AND SHARP POINTY THINGS. THE BOYS AND SOME GIRLS STILL LIKE CARTOONS AND VIDEO GAMES WITH HEROS WITH EDGED WEAPONS SO PERHAPS THEY WILL GROW INTO IT AND CATCH THE COLLOCTORS DISEASE. THE WINE WOMEN AND SONG DOES TAKE ONE AWAY FROM COLLECTING AS IT SHOULD BUT WE LEARN WITH AGE THAT THE SHARP POINTY THINGS ARE FAR LESS DANGEROUS THAN THE FAIR SEX. ![]() |
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#4 | |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,613
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Olomouc
Posts: 1,708
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25 - but been at it for a decade off and on.
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: The Sharp end
Posts: 2,928
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So far, Iain and Lotfy are the hope for the future
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#7 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Olomouc
Posts: 1,708
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,613
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Gene, do you know something we don't? ![]() |
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#9 | |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Kuwait
Posts: 1,340
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#10 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 748
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I, m 38 years old,and I have been collecting during 20 years.
best regards carlos |
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#11 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,192
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There was not an empty surface in his house that was not a display of something! Always miss you my friend. For me, collecting started much like this, I was a kid in Utah, WWII had been over just over 9 years. You could buy old bayonets out of barrels in surplus stores, and a guys dad had been a guard at a POW camp.....gave me a bunch of German medals, helmet etc. That sent me off to US medals and patches (also in these stores). Eventually by the 60s in southern Calif. I got my first sword, a Moro keris in a garage, my payment for helping sand down a Model A frame! Off I went! My first regulation sword an old British M1796 heavy cav disc hilt...it was so exciting, especially that I had a book on old swords ("American & European Swords" Claude Blair, 1962)...and one of these was 'in the book'!!! I could say........look! I have one of these! My love of history had reached a third dimension as I could actually own the weapons used in events, times and places that fascinated me. With the cost of weapons usually a bit out of reach, I began buying books........and soon realized....it was studying the HISTORY of these weapons that was my passion, more than actually collecting them. I still bought them, but aligned with things I was studying.........and was more for having singular representative examples of historic themes. So for me it has been more a lifetime of research and serious study of arms history, and I have gratefully learned so much from the many authors and collectors who have virtually mentored me over so many years. These pages on these forums have presented the greatest opportunities for me over the past over two decades! and I will always remember the great discussions and adventures shared! Now at 75, still hooked on research, but those swords collected years ago still with me. They have been my friends and guides into history........that rusty, beaten old disc hilt is still there.........smiling! ![]() After all, well venerated at 215 yrs.....to my paltry 75!!!! |
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#12 |
Member
Join Date: May 2014
Location: Ireland
Posts: 543
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Hi All
I'm 51 and collecting militaria since i was 14 or so . My dad worked part time in England with an ex WWII para, Paul the Para had no children and he knew I had an interest in militaria. One time when I was over with my dad he gave me a lot of his insignia and his second pattern FS commando knife. I still have all these items but off topic for a Ethno forum. I have collected on and off since then but my interest in Ethno weaponry developed around 15 years ago when I kept seeing interesting items in house auctions and car boot sales at ridiculously low prices so I started to purchase the items. I have found this forum invaluable and ever so friendly, I cant contribute much but when i can i like to include my small bit of knowledge. Thanks and keep well Ken |
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#13 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Retirement is a “penultimate journey”:-(((((
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#14 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,992
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Ariel, one should never retire.
Why? Because everybody I have known during my life who has "retired" has died not long after announcing that they have done so. One must never stop some sort of useful endeavour. |
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#15 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2017
Posts: 445
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Jim, I hope you go back and read post #108 from December 2012 (when you were a mere lad in your sixties). Thank you for setting a standard for those of us who pursue this interest. |
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