Featured Real or Repro? Bow, quiver & arrows

Discussion in 'Tribal Art' started by 2manybooks, Aug 22, 2022.

  1. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    @komokwa, @all_fakes, et al.

    I would like your opinions on this set, coming up at a local auction. I am curious about the fringe, in particular. Thanks.

    1.jpg

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  2. all_fakes

    all_fakes Well-Known Member

    Bows and such are outside my area of expertise; these do look to have some age, but I have no idae as to place of origin.
     
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  3. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Thanks for looking.
     
  4. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    Soooooo COOL
     
    Last edited: Aug 22, 2022
  5. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    Saying that though, the detail pieces that have been cut, look pretty clean on the inside
     
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  6. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

  7. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    That’s very cool indeed and looks well made with same age to it. Been looking at Apache examples. Were the arrow points always or sometimes stone? It also bothers me how bright and ‘new’ the red dyed decoration areas looks. Or is the red synthetic material? (but I really don’t know anything about this)
     
    Last edited: Aug 22, 2022
  8. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    I have seen only the photos so far, not the thing in person. It is a confusing combination of old and new looking pieces. The stone arrowheads are OK, and it is interesting that there is the blunt tipped bird arrow included. But older arrows could have come from anywhere. The pierced leather elements do appear to have some age, as you folks have said. But I would expect the red to be red wool flannel, and it would be unusual to have escaped moth damage over the years. The fringe looks more like commercial leather, too clean, and regular, like it was cut by machine.

    I will try to go look at it. I may be able to answer my own questions if I actually see it.
     
  9. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

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    i.m no expert in this...

    my take away..
    the arrows are pre-historic style and don't match the quiver..
    the blunt arrow is for bird hunting..., don't match the others..
    the quiver ...
    too much fringe...not enuf wear to be anything but made for sale..
    but that fringe is a Plains style......
    and fur....instead of hide???

    [​IMG]
     
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  10. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Thanks for your input.
     
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  11. terry5732

    terry5732 Well-Known Member

    Made for tourists

    20th century
     
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  12. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Yeah. I have a tendency to to become overly optimistic with such things, in spite of misgivings. So it is helpful to have other opinions to reinforce what my cautious brain was telling me.
     
  13. smallaxe

    smallaxe Well-Known Member

    I can't point to anything that solidly backs this, but after examining these photos a while, I think this is a repro item. It may come out of the mountain man re-enactor crowd. My main comparison is plains items, so if this is well away from there, I could be wrong. The things that put me off:
    If authentic, I think metal points on arrows would be more likely (but less cool),
    The soiling doesn't look authentic,
    The cutout design isn't common,
    The exposed stitching doesn't fit the skill authentic stuff would show,
    It's hard to tell for sure from photos, but at least some leather looks like brain tan, but different parts are of really different tan quality, some pretty scabby,
    Hair on seems uncommon,
    Bow looks pretty rudimentary.
    Here's a newly made repro for comparison: http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php?topic=13593.0
     
    Last edited: Aug 22, 2022
  14. all_fakes

    all_fakes Well-Known Member

    The cutout designs are one aspect that seemed odd to me.
     
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  15. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    @smallaxe - Thank you very much for your careful analysis.
     
  16. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

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