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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Mother North
Posts: 189
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Hi Lotfy,
Thank you for sharing your new piece - may you enjoy it in good health! I am as sure as I possibly can be, without having it in hand, that your hilt is made from bovine horn. In a longitudinal section, rhinoceros horn will not display the hazy "streaks" that are visible on the side of yours, but rather be of a type either where the grain has a look of crushed/slushed ice or where the individual chitinous fibres are visible - the latter looks exactly like a bundle of hard compressed hairs (which it is ![]() Rhino as well as bovine horn can be translucent as well as display a wide palette of colors, so these can't be taken as a proof characters on their own. I attach here for comparison a picture of the hilts of a couple of rhino-nimchas that recently passed through my hands. The icy type is on top - the hairy on bottom. The picture kindof sucks, but the swords aren't here anymore, so new pics are unfortunately not possible. I hope you will see what I mean though. ![]() Personally, I think people often overestimate the aesthetical qualities of rhinoceros horn, just because it is rare. I've often seen somebody gawk over a piece of rhino which, in all honesty, was as gray and dull as concrete. Conversely, I recently saw the handle of a bade-bade and the belt clip of a Javanese knife, both made in qualities and colors of buffalo horn, that nearly knocked my socks off! In my opinion, when concerning any horn, beauty is all about grain, color and of course age patina. The source species is less important. Cordially, - Thor |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 33
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are you sure that is not a tourist one??? because in my opinion, a proper Jambiya as used by the people of Yemen, is generally the larger variety that has a greater curve.
like this one: |
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Kuwait
Posts: 1,340
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Jambiyas have different design. The one you show has very low quality silver work and appears touristy. The one I am showing is recent but a real dress piece with a good quality belt. Though this is hard to define because I have seen fine hilts and crappy scabbards/blades before :/ |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 33
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bow compare mine to this:
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#5 | |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Kuwait
Posts: 1,340
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I agree with you. Some of the rhino pieces I got were very dull looking :P This one confuses me because it has alot of the rhino features, including grain at the top of the hilt and I'll try to take some extra photos to show the other features. Its heavily polished so some features are hard to photograph. I really dont mind it being bovine though, its still a nice example with an attractive belt. |
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#6 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,280
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I just found this thread.
I agree that this is bovine - not brown enough and the black regions in white I have seen in different cow horns. |
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