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#1 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,280
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Jens, I thought that kundun technique was the only one used on such high end pieces. This uses 24K gold, not lead. The stones look second rate at best (if not glass) and so I wonder if the lead, foil, and poorer stones was a later attempt at repairing what was lost on this khanjar.
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Hi Battara,
Like I write in the text to the picture, the ‘stones’ are not gems, they are glass/crystal. That is the reason why I show this picture. Had the ‘stones’ been put in recently after the old method described, and had the lead been covered with gold foil – I think it would fool a lot of people. The hilt shown is not a fake, it is genuine, but sometimes people want more glamour than they can afford, and then methods like the one described is taken in use, or maybe the owner had some misfortune and had the real gems replaced with glass – we will never know. To swap the gems for glass and metal foil, and to swap gold for lead with gold foil, would have saved the poor buyer a lot of money, but the show effect would have been almost as high as if it had been real gems and real gold. The kundan technique is supposed to be almost two thousand years old, and was refine during the Mogul reign. When using the Kundan method to set gems, gold are beaten to a very thin foil, when the foil is thin enough it can form a molecular bond when pressure is applied with a tool. The foil is worked around the stone and the stone adhered in its mount. It is true like you say, that the kundan technique usually applies to gold setting, and maybe it is called something else when lead is used, I don’t know, but I rather think that the name is used when it comes to the way the gem/glass I fastened, than to which metal is used. I knew what I was buying, but had the hilt been ‘shined up’ a bit, it might have fooled some of you. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 485
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jens,
your honesty is very apparant in what you write ![]() the hilt is a good thing, and the channels cut into the pommel area and the base of the hilt suggest original gold inlay. inlay on a jade hilt suggest the hilt once may have held expensive stones and not ' born' with glass. a nice piece. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Yes, you are right, the hilt could very well have started out with a lot of gems and gold, on the other hand, none of us know the reason why it ended up like this, but I don't think the way it looks is newly made
![]() Jens |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Battara,
I do answer late on this one - sorry, but here I am :-). The dagger with 'kundan' shown, is an example of how they sometimes tried to fool buyers. The original gold/gems have been stripped off, and likely sold for scrap value. What you then do is, to take some coloured metal foil and glue it where the gems have been. then you take some glass/crystal pieces of the right size, place them on the foil, take some soft metal, in this case lead and hammer it around the 'gem', and at last you take a very thing gold foil and cover the lead. In the end you have an 'almost kundan' decorated dagger hilt. |
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#6 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,280
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Thank you Jens. It would appear that even the forger's art takes skill!
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