Featured 1800s silver-topped walking stick

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by Shangas, Aug 14, 2022.

  1. Shangas

    Shangas Underage Antiques Collector and Historian

    Picked this up about two weeks ago. It's silver and bamboo. The flattop handle/grip is an addition I made, when a previous repair by another owner proved not to be robust enough. The silver disc I put on is actually half of a broken silver cufflink...

    stick01.jpg stick02.jpg stick03.jpg stick04.jpg

    The collar is made up of decorations of chinese figures and plants and Asian-style buildings, etc. It's basically a woodland scene.

    I think something like this would've been made in China (or somewhere in SE Asia) and sold as a colonial / export piece to the western market.
     
  2. Shangas

    Shangas Underage Antiques Collector and Historian

    Here you can see the repair someone else did at one point in the stick's history. It just wasn't substantial enough and broke off shortly after I bought it...

    stick010.jpg stick011.jpg stick012.jpg stick013.jpg stick014.jpg

    Personally, I think it was butt-ugly, so the thing breaking off and me having to repair it was a happy accident.
     
  3. kyratango

    kyratango Bug jewellery addiction!

    Nice job! Isn't it very satisfying when you find the appropriate piece to make a replacement!!!;)
     
  4. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Nice find, and perfect repair, Shangas.
    Or to the Asian market. I can imagine the fashionable young Javanese Peranakan below out on the town with your walking stick. His is different, but just as stylish and it also has a silver top. Photo 1887.

    Photograph-4-_-Amek-Gambar-_-Java-_-1887-1.jpg
    https://cihc.nl/25-kleding-van-de-chinese-gemeenschap-in-nederlands-indie-4-10/
     
  5. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    My that young man is stylish.

    Debora
     
  6. antidiem

    antidiem Well-Known Member

    Very nice repair, Shangas, the cufflink is a great match!

    Had to giggle at the use of the term "stylish" here! :bucktooth:
    Indeed VERY STYLISH :singing::) I agree.
     
    kyratango, Any Jewelry and johnnycb09 like this.
  7. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    Beautiful repair, Shangas!!!
     
    Born2it likes this.
  8. Shangas

    Shangas Underage Antiques Collector and Historian

    Thanks for the responses, everybody!

    Repairing the stick was certainly an interesting adventure.

    I didn't have the facilities to solder the cufflink on (and at any rate, I still had to fill the hole that you see in the photographs), so instead, I filled it up with epoxy resin, and then used the overflow from the fill to stick the cufflink on, filling the back of the link, and then manipulating it until it was centered on top of the shaft.

    Once the edge of the cufflink was even all the way around (so that it formed a nice rim at the top of the handle), I left it alone to dry. I didn't want this to cave in like the other handle did (not likely - the cufflink is MUCH thicker silver), so I really overfilled it with the epoxy, to remove ANY gaps (and to improve the bond when it dried).

    Overall, I think it's a great final result.
     
  9. Shangas

    Shangas Underage Antiques Collector and Historian

    I really didn't know what to think, or to expect, when I tried to fix this thing. I really was pleasantly surprised when I found out that it fit so well. Exactly the right size for what I wanted!!
     
    Aquitaine, Born2it, Bakersgma and 3 others like this.
  10. bercrystal

    bercrystal Well-Known Member

    You will have to dress appropriately when you carry this to the next flea market or antique shop. ;):playful: :happy::happy:
     
  11. Shangas

    Shangas Underage Antiques Collector and Historian

    Just because I can't stand things looking ugly...I made one last final repair:

    stick001.jpg

    I used a TEENY TINY PAPER-THIN scrap of silver sheet to patch up the gap left at the bottom rim of the collar. It's simply slid in underneath the silver and pushed up into place to disguise the damage, but it's stuck in there real good, so it's not coming out for nothin'!

    From a distance, it's invisible, and up-close, it looks like a repair that might've been done at any time during the stick's history, so it blends in with the battered appearance...

    stick002.jpg
     
  12. antidiem

    antidiem Well-Known Member

    perfecto mundo!!
    I like that you epoxied the cuff link on there too, rather than some solder job.
    Perfect finish to the wrap! :)
     
    Born2it likes this.
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