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#1 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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This is the first time I have to respectfully disagree with you:-) The presence of fold line in my strong opinion is a sign of quality rather than carelessness. It is an indication of a folding process and I believe it was intentionally left by a smith to showcase the fact of him folding the steel, i.e. his last fold out of many. It is still used by dealers as the advantageous "selling point", proving the manual folding. Many high quality blades do have this line present, so it's a good thing! Unlike Katana blade, which has to be spotless, the thornier fold line on shamshir blade makes it more beautiful:-) I also agree with Aristeidis. I do not think it is acid etched, in fact - it does not look acid etched at all (i.e. false wootz), even though it is quite strange to have uneven blade surface, and the pattern indicates real wootz, perhaps sham wootz. |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
Posts: 512
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Hi Aristeidis and Alex, thanks for your insights. Alex, a discussion without disagreement is boring, so dont worry!
i havent thought of the visible "folded evidence" as a quality evidence! I am sure dealers can use it now to prove it is hand made, but what about the time that the blade was made when it was the only way? What would be the reason then? I guess it could have been used as evidence during the beggining of industrial revolution when the machne and the man-made blade were simultanesly on the market. But look also at the photo where the end point of the blade is: The folding of the 2 pieces is almost seperated in 2 parts, not a very reassuring thing when you go for battle. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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Yes, I noticed the split at the tip, and thought of it as a chip, perhaps a result of an impact. It looks like very small inclusion, and something which could have been easily filed off if desired.
I do believe the fold lines were not regarded as defects, as most of these blades were produced prior to industrial revolution. What we perceive as imperfections now were common and they meant something we may not recognize. The fold line could have been the statement of a process, not a prove that is was hand-made as it was obvious those days. The final fold could also signify the "sacred" process of making a blade. just my personal, thoughts:-) Last edited by ALEX; 14th December 2009 at 04:48 PM. |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Apparently, there are some pics I cannot see: I am at a place with a very, very pre-industrial Internet connection.
I think it is a Sham wootz, so I am somewhat confused that "folding" is mentioned. Are you implying it is a mechanical damascus? Am I wrong thinking it is wootz? |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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Ariel, the "folding" here refers to a fold line visible on top ridge of the blade - a visible line associated with the last fold of the steel. I also think it is wootz or sham wootz, and neither mechanical nor acid etch.
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 478
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 373
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The fold seems to be involving about 1/3 of the blade rather than a 1/2. I'd like to see Alex's theory prove out as I have a dog in the fight so to speak.
This Khanjar came in with a forging flaw, or? Your thoughts, Steve |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 189
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The seams sometimes seen on the spine of wootz blades arrive there in three ways; they can be caused by porosity on the top of the ingot that gets stretched into fissures or cracks as the ingot is forged into a bar, they can be the remnants of a slight depression in the top of the ingot that is not removed in the forging, or they can be a sign that two or more pieces of wootz were welded together or welded onto a piece of core steel. The artisans of the time considered these seams flaws, though you do sometimes see them on otherwise nice blades. Although wootz was not ‘folded’ in the sense that pattern-welded material was folded to get layers, they would often join two or more pieces of wootz to get a sword-sized bar of metal or in latter days to ‘dress up’ a bar of plain steel.
Below is a photo of an interesting piece of metal (Thanks Artzi!) that was lost or discarded immediately after the welding process, an ingot of wootz cut in half and welded back on itself with a third piece in the middle, probably to increase mass. The above blade looks like wootz to me, and not sham – you can see a ladder rung in one photo, did they put the kirk narduban into sham blades? (I know, one rung does not a ladder make ![]() |
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