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Old 6th June 2025, 06:22 PM   #1
ulfberth
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Originally Posted by 10thRoyal View Post
I for one love the idea of a lessons learned folder. I'd love to see a collection of photos of reproductions on there along with an explanation as to why they look like reproductions. For example, show a picture of the smooth steel surface of the inside of a Victorian burgonet, then show a photo of a hammered finish on an original burgonet.

You can look at my profile on the site, my second thread ever was about, *screams internally*, a Victorian burgonet I bought. Man did I want to kick and scream. I was so bitter about it that it's actually funny in hindsight. But the knowledge I gained was worth the price of admission.

We are all on the same side here. We all want more authentic pieces in the hands of people who enjoy researching and enjoy the hunt. There will be bruised egos, there will be experience challenged, and there will be dollars spent. But after all that, we'll figure something new out, we'll look at it soberly after, apologize for harsh words, and go find something cool and undiscovered out in the world. We all at some point have to be a student, a teacher, or someone to pat someone on the back say "sure it might be a reproduction, but it looks pretty good for a fake."

This has been a great community by and large. So we all need to make the case for growing it and keeping it accessible. To keep the person who might have bought a fake, still interested and willing to learn and have fun. And personally I think that a lessons learned folder would be a great way to do that.
I would be very selective about who you share this information with about what specifically doesn't look right and why and certainly never post it on a forum for everyone to see.
I have no doubt that this is with the best intentions but that information can be used for other purposes and isn't that exactly what we want to avoid?
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Old 7th June 2025, 06:14 AM   #2
Lee
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Originally Posted by ulfberth View Post
I have no doubt that this is with the best intentions but that information can be used for other purposes and isn't that exactly what we want to avoid?
That has always been the conundrum with projects like this website and forum. As a student/collector gains experience, he/she will likely come to recognize little clues that something isn't right. Unfortunately, when one publicly shares these insights, forgers will take notice and soon those criteria cease to be reliable and separating the wheat from the chaff will only become more difficult.

Hopefully, the potential harm of presentation of authentic examples is more than offset by positive educational benefits. Similarly, presentation and identification of forgeries, labeled as such, hopefully carries more benefits than harms. But, detailed publication of easy to recognize and easily corrected features of forgeries likely carries much greater potential for harm than good to future collectors.

So, for this reason I have held many of my own observations in this regard close over the years despite the urge to share them. An aspiring collector needs to directly experience as many authentic examples as possible, as well as known fakes, and will, by this process, develop his/her own conscious and unconscious sense about items encountered.
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Old 7th June 2025, 04:54 PM   #3
Jim McDougall
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I agree again, there is a great deal of potential adverse effect if we offer a 'course' in production with more authenticity for the wares of those creating to deceive. Those here with experience of course recognize the features and nuances in examples that pretty much scream 'fake', but then there are those which have been refurbished in their working lives to serve as ersatz versions of weapons required.

It is truly hard to tell without hands on examination. I always try to remember to issue observations with the caveat, 'from photos, this APPEARS to be such and such' and then detail whatever particulars I can add toward the use etc of authentic examples.

Some of these 'contrived' examples created in often rural or remote settings as ersatz weapons can be so outlandish that there can be no notion they were ever intended to deceive. Case in point, this Mexican composite likely put together in a frontier area using a most unlikely assembly of components.
Someone trying to produce a deceptive espada ancha would have at least 'tried' to come close.

It is a conundrum indeed, and I have known dealers who avoid posting for these very reasons, 'giving away information'.
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