|  | 
|  26th January 2025, 07:47 AM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Jun 2021 
					Posts: 77
				 |  Did officers also tie swordknots to suspension rings? 
			
			I saw this photo of an officer a while back, the photo is grainy but what I have seen he attached the swordknot to the suspension ring instead of the hilt? Have you seen this attachment method before, or did this guy simply violate regulations?
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  26th January 2025, 09:14 AM | #2 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2021 Location: New Zealand 
					Posts: 298
				 |   
			
			Photo isn’t really clear enough to be certain.  Sword knots are typically fairly long; the end of the one in the photo is pretty much hanging where I’d expect if it wasn’t wrapped around the hilt. In a practical (and traditional) sense there’s no reason to wrap it around the suspension rings, because it’s purpose is to be a lanyard securing the weapon to the users’ wrist. | 
|   |   | 
|  26th January 2025, 09:52 AM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Room 101, Glos. UK 
					Posts: 4,259
				 |   
			
			It does look like the belt suspension straps are under his jacket - I concur that the sword knot strap is hanging from the sword hilt, many have a dark strap with the metallic tassel at the end, so the strap part doesn't show in the somewhat fuzzy photo. I enhanced/sharpened the relevant area, not enough contrast, but I get the distinct impression of the strap continuing upwards behind the suspension ring toward the sword's upper guard and beyond - the only hilt part I could make out.
		 Last edited by kronckew; 26th January 2025 at 10:21 AM. | 
|   |   | 
|  11th February 2025, 08:36 PM | #4 | |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2021 
					Posts: 77
				 |   Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  | 
| 
 | 
 |