by: juanespada | View PDF | Print View | Html View
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Cane swords are contemporary canes with a concealed sword inside. The weapons were trendy in Europe during the 18th century; however, cane swords were carried throughout The Orient and early Rome as well. Once firearms made their rise as a popular method of self defense cane sword weilded by knights-errant were replaced with walking sticks for the wealthy and aristocratic aristocrat of that century. Experiments were conducted to design technologically advanced canes which could work simultaneously as an epee and a sheathe for blades, compasses, and flasks.
Cane shafts were commonly produced from Malacca wood with the handle rounded to fit the hand and made with metal. Contemporary cane swords display Malacca in addition to bamboo shafts with coin silver pommels. The deocratively cut wood handles were stag heads, hallmarks, or skull carvings that is intended more for artistic qualities than practicality. The swords themselves are commonly made with hardened steel, complete with a dagger-point sword. The pommels included mechanisms that hold the blade in place while being carried as a cane, though push-to-release mechanisms had been known to cause misfortunes. Next to the quick-release apparatus, there were also twist-lock and dual-lock mechanisms.
Today cane swords are carried as nonfuctional pieces or historic items, ranging far from its original capacity as a combat instrument carried over the nineteenth century. Noted as concealed sword, these canes are not carried for convalescent purposes and are legislated out in Arkansas, California, Massachusetts, New York, and Canada.
At one time an aristocrat's province, cane swords to this day cause envy from antiquarians over their attentive realism and artisanship. Heads commonly were hand cast in silver, bronze, or wood. The canes can be designed to be at ease in the hand, wood, or aircraft aircraft aluminum. Vintage cane swords using the vintage fashion frequently coveted and are for sale in a classic and unaffected format fashioned with a continental handle, or the classic handle. Real waxed antlers and whaletooth ivory were the rage around the height of cane swords and are still a noted alternative to this day.
Currently, designers makes fashionable canes that match each and every stylistic themes encompassing basilisk heads or skulls. Among the options presented are Kaiser handle swords with an ebony lightweight metal shaft, or knob cane swords. There are sword-technologically advanced tourist handles with a wood shaft, or even a coin silver pommel with a strong wood shaft. The more dressy of these cane swords involve a knob sword with a cobalt carbon fiber body, a handgun grip sword, or a buffalo horn pommel that invovles a charcoal fiberglass hilt with a metal ring.
For the more chic of these canes, antiquarians can locate mighty Aphrodite swords with wooden shafts, titanium sword pommels, hidden stiletto hilts, or coin silver sword-gadget flat pommels, each with a wood shaft. Coquies frog swords, blowpipe knob handles, or faux ivory ball pommels come with wood shafts and brass fillials. There are also Fayet-sword knob pommels and hidden spike knob handles. The price for any of these connoisseur cane swords differs. If it is a collector's display or custom built, the price will reach from advance of one hundred dollars to just under five hundred dollars.
More affordable pieces for these vintages contain eagle head ends with a cast metal pommel. There are monster blades and lion cane sword each with cast pot metal handles as a substitute for sterling silver. A star wars inspired illuminated sword is available for more playful pieces. There are alien push to light swords, Joker inspired push to light swords, along with USMC with the Semper fi Marine hallmark on the pommel. With a cast resin skull, skull walking sticks are obtainable, along with Joker canes with a red cane shaft and high density plastic pommel. Kisuke swords are obtainable in natural wood in addition to casino cane swords with a clear plastic grip. People involved in Greek mythology purchase a Kraakan sea monster alternative, while people more intent in duck hunting can utilize the drake cane sword. Nonfunctional examples aside, emulating the original uses of cane swords are twin handled cane swords with a sword and knife set, in addition to gun cane swords, fun canes, umbrella swords, and secret flasket canes.
Juan Espada been trained in traditional european fencing and swordplay from a young age, and was a semifinalist in the Chilean fencing team for the 2004 in Athens. He has an affinity towards swords and is an avid collector. A few of his favorite cane sword designs can be found at http://www.caneswords.net