How Much is a Sword Worth?

Ойын-сауық

IT DEPENDS... on the condition, rarity, materials, and labor involved in making it. Also supply and demand of course, back in history when swords had practical value in warfare and dueling.
Let's take a look at the most expensive examples (like a Japanese Tachi worth supposedly 105 million dollars), some real-life market values in medieval England, and what causes price differences in modern reproductions.
Being a collector is always a costly endeavor, but some of these are FAR beyond the reach of "mere mortals".
If you're interested in real-life "gunblades" and other historical combination weapons, check out these videos too:
• Yes, Gunblades Are Rea...
• The Weirdest Combinati...
How the "Skalchion" was made:
• The Skalchion - Making...
** Sources / credits **
$105M Tachi
worldart.news/2021/11/04/100-...
mediabiasfactcheck.com/forbes/
Sword of Chinese emperor Qianglong (18th century), sold for $7.7M
wealthygorilla.com/most-expen...
Napoleon Bonaparte’s sword
worldrecordacademy.com/busine...
Examples of heavy corrosion
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
10th century Viking sword
www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...
Longsword from Arsenal of Alexandria collection, before 1419
www.vipartfair.com/most-expen...
Italian or Spanish sword, 1500
www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...
3000 year old bronze sword, perfectly preserved
www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-...
Ax-Pistol of Grand Duke Ferdinand I de' Medici, 1580
www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...
Sword with wheellock pistol, 1575
www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...
Medieval prices and income
thehistoryofengland.co.uk/res...
The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England by Ian Mortimer
Paperback: amzn.to/3IRwl7Y
Audiobook: amzn.to/3IO2BZA
Ceremonial sword
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Background music:
"Winds of Stories" by Horror Pen
opengameart.org/content/winds...
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license (CC BY 3.0)
"Wandering Merchant" by Tausdei
opengameart.org/content/wande...
CC BY 3.0
** Merch **
www.bonfire.com/store/skallswag/
If you want to join Bonfire to start selling your own merch: www.bonfire.com/welcome/07bb1...
** Support the channel **
Help fund future videos, get bonus content and access to an exclusive Discord server:
/ skallagrim
/ @skallagrim
Other ways to support the channel by shopping through affiliate links:
Kult of Athena, my favorite online store for reproductions of historical arms and armor, fantasy swords, etc:
www.kultofathena.com/?koa=259
Where to get HEMA gear and practice swords:
www.woodenswords.com/?Click=1799
Want to treat your face fluff? I highly recommend the balms and oils from Beard Sorcery:
beardsorcery.com/?ref=0UEFtHW...
Books about history, martial arts, swords, knives, video/audio equipment, and other stuff I recommend:
US - www.amazon.com/shop/skallagri...
Canada - amzn.to/2HeOCMA
** Second channel / other social media **
/ @skallhalla
/ _skallagrim_
/ skallagrimyt
/ skallagrim_yt
#skallagrim #sword #history #value #collection #medieval #katana #saber

Пікірлер: 530

  • @grindory
    @grindoryАй бұрын

    I like swords

  • @vanjazed7021

    @vanjazed7021

    Ай бұрын

    I don't believe you

  • @MaskedUlfjarn

    @MaskedUlfjarn

    Ай бұрын

    Yoooo me too!

  • @marcelodepijama

    @marcelodepijama

    Ай бұрын

    Me too😊

  • @thalessousa9965

    @thalessousa9965

    Ай бұрын

    Hell yeah.

  • @paleoph6168

    @paleoph6168

    Ай бұрын

    I like trains.

  • @CazadorSlayer
    @CazadorSlayerАй бұрын

    I nearly forgot how astonishingly beautiful the Skallchion is. A true work of art!

  • @GuitarsRockForever

    @GuitarsRockForever

    Ай бұрын

    That sword definitely worth more than few thousands. Consider the quantity, the craftsmanship, and it was one off unique piece, I won't be surprised if it would be auctioned for much higher.

  • @badrequest5596

    @badrequest5596

    Ай бұрын

    @@GuitarsRockForever considering the high quality work ilya does and that once i saw a question on his ig about how much one of his particular swords was, he replied something along the lines of "this one was made for a client and the price is private, but i do need a new mustang...", i would say something from him would be along the line of at least 10k up to 30 or 40k, depending on the work and detail. but that's just a guess. you can also go to their store website where a knife can go from 1k up to 2k sometimes, so you can also extrapolate from that. so yes, expensive

  • @Ranstone

    @Ranstone

    Ай бұрын

    @@GuitarsRockForever I agree. I'd place it 3K easily, or even 4K. Then again, there's a GORGOUS custom Mateusz Sulowski XIV/XVI sword on SBG that's accurately priced at 3,300, and no one has bought it for two years, even though that's under the MSRP. IDK...

  • @Verchiel_

    @Verchiel_

    Ай бұрын

    In the hypothetical scenario of Skal auctioning it off, i don't doubt the high bids could reach upwards of 10 thousand solely some of the more well off fans @@GuitarsRockForever

  • @pyridonfaltis9761

    @pyridonfaltis9761

    Ай бұрын

    @@GuitarsRockForeverDo not forget that it belongs (well if its ever sold, "belonged") to a celebrity, making it even more valuable.

  • @seanheath4492
    @seanheath4492Ай бұрын

    Given that the Skalchion was custom-made as a gift, it could be argued that it's priceless.

  • @Verchiel_

    @Verchiel_

    Ай бұрын

    Would you find less value in a 1-to-1 copy of the item, commissioned using the money from the sold original item? I understand the sentimental value of "this is the original piece with all the nice feelings attached to it", but i personally wouldn't mind just. Making some free money and using the rest to get an identical copy of it.

  • @seanheath4492

    @seanheath4492

    Ай бұрын

    @@Verchiel_ Honestly? Yes. Even if it was an exact point-for-point replica, it would still be just that: a replica. Not the sword that Matt and Ilya put their time and effort into (more or less for free). Not saying that under no circumstances would I sell the original and get a (less expensive) replica made, but I wouldn't value the replica the same as the original.

  • @pyridonfaltis9761

    @pyridonfaltis9761

    Ай бұрын

    @@Verchiel_Of course the 1-to-1 copy would be less valuable. After all, the original belongs (some day far from now it will come "belonged") to a well known sword celebrity Skallagrim, making it highly valuable. Copies, not so much.

  • @shaynecarter-murray3127
    @shaynecarter-murray3127Ай бұрын

    From what i can gather, The appraisal is more for insurance purposes than what to expect from a sale.

  • @robertsmith4681
    @robertsmith4681Ай бұрын

    Considering that in this case the sword in question is a literal National Treasure, that would be like valuing the British crown jewels for scrap value ... It's evaluated to that large amount because its basically irreplaceable.

  • @RorikH

    @RorikH

    Ай бұрын

    *Nicolas Cage Voice* We're going to steal the Fukushima Masanori Tachi.

  • @HLl564

    @HLl564

    Ай бұрын

    Also Napoleon is not very popular and samuraijs are iterally the most badass phenomenom that ever existed

  • @fransthefox9682

    @fransthefox9682

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@HLl564Samurai were not any more badass than knights.

  • @Candlemancer

    @Candlemancer

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@fransthefox9682 But they have much better PR, and that matters much more in this context

  • @fransthefox9682

    @fransthefox9682

    Ай бұрын

    @@Candlemancer PR? Is this some new Gen Z or Gen Alpha crap?

  • @Crangaso
    @CrangasoАй бұрын

    More Cut for your coin / slash for your shekel / Pounds for your parry / Lira for your lunge That custom sword is sweet AF. The ending with AMSR of objects being cut was real good.

  • @weswolever7477

    @weswolever7477

    Ай бұрын

    Skall needs to make am ASMR video of cuts

  • @motv1nd193

    @motv1nd193

    Ай бұрын

    @@weswolever7477 +1

  • @frankharr9466

    @frankharr9466

    Ай бұрын

    More slash for your silver.

  • @Crangaso

    @Crangaso

    Ай бұрын

    @@frankharr9466 Nice one!

  • @ChaplainPhantasm

    @ChaplainPhantasm

    Ай бұрын

    Trinkets for your thrust, defense for your dollar, ergonomics for your euro

  • @MrZetor
    @MrZetorАй бұрын

    @4:51 Fascinating! I would have never thought that (even) a knight could buy a sword with a single day's salary.

  • @Specter_1125

    @Specter_1125

    Ай бұрын

    Even full plate become pretty reasonably priced by the mid 15th century. An infantryman could buy a passable plate harness for a few months wages. Granted, that’s if he didn’t buy anything else, but it’s by no means an unobtainable amount.

  • @user-bi7xd8ry5p

    @user-bi7xd8ry5p

    Ай бұрын

    By that point, metallurgy had advanced quite a bit, and the scale of steel production was increasing rapidly, not to mention the increase in overseas trade. All of these factors drove the value down.

  • @nahuelmat

    @nahuelmat

    Ай бұрын

    What's interesting to me is how low the price of steel tools is compared to a basic food item like eggs

  • @MonkeyJedi99

    @MonkeyJedi99

    Ай бұрын

    @@nahuelmat A high-quality carpenter's hammer can last generations with moderate care, while eggs might last 3-6 weeks (with refrigeration). On that basis, even a $50 hammer is cheap.

  • @Markbell73

    @Markbell73

    Ай бұрын

    I imagine it would also depend on which blacksmith forged it, and for whom it was forged.

  • @JagerLange
    @JagerLangeАй бұрын

    That bronze find from last year was legitimately beautiful. I remember seeing that story at the time and I've been enamoured with it ever since.

  • @Qmeister044

    @Qmeister044

    Ай бұрын

    I love how copper alloy artifacts turn up in gorgeous condition since they don't corrode and fall apart as much as iron based ones.

  • @Jonahch2v9
    @Jonahch2v9Ай бұрын

    A gift from your people. You secured your empire with it. Passed it down through your kin. It became a symbol of martial pride. Now it's in a pop stars "neat things" collection.

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    It's quite weird to see such significant artifacts in the private collections of the filthy rich, rather than in a museum.

  • @Ranstone

    @Ranstone

    Ай бұрын

    @@Skallagrim They won't live forever.

  • @kittehgo

    @kittehgo

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SkallagrimSo Dr Jones was partially correct, when he said "It belongs in a museum"

  • @spencereades
    @spencereadesАй бұрын

    As Syrus succinctly put it, "Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it"

  • @charliericker274

    @charliericker274

    Ай бұрын

    But when talking about value of an item, it's pretty pointless to just say "it's worth whatever someone will pay". On the flip side, if I lie to someone about an item and they pay 1 million bucks because they thought it was actually a rare artifact, is it worth 1 million? I would say no, it's not, I just scammed someone. Or if a super rare artifact is sold for 10 bucks because no one knew how rare it was, is it only worth 10 bucks? Again I would say no, the buyer and seller were just ignorant of it's potential value. Basically, item is worth what you can get for it, sure. But how do you determine what the most you could get for it is, or what a 'fair' asking price is. Well, that is when you need to make an evaluation of an items value. At that point saying "it's worth what someone will pay" doesn't really help.

  • @TheAgamemnon911

    @TheAgamemnon911

    Ай бұрын

    That's only half the truth. Everything is also worth the amount the seller is willing to accept to part with it.

  • @LordBrittish

    @LordBrittish

    Ай бұрын

    I like the meme of the book for sale on Amazon titled: “How To Write A Book Worth $350,000” that was priced at $350,000. I’m sure I have the exact number wrong, but you get the point.

  • @QualityPen

    @QualityPen

    Ай бұрын

    I have to love all the people trying to point out exceptions to the rule in an attempt to sound smart. Thanks, Captain Obviouses, however would we know without you that this rule is an oversimplification and not a comprehensive legal framework outlining the price of an exchanged item under all possible circumstances?

  • @guyharrison909

    @guyharrison909

    Ай бұрын

    The price is what someone will pay for it, until that happens the value/ asking price isn't confirmed.

  • @user-xj1cs4sf1e
    @user-xj1cs4sf1eАй бұрын

    Good to see Scallchion again, watched entire process of making back when it was in build, it was absolute banger! Can't imagine how honourable it is to receive sword like this one

  • @vladdracula2643
    @vladdracula2643Ай бұрын

    I'm genuinely so happy to see you doing well. I was really worried about the car crash and knife fight knee injury. Congratulations from a 10+ year fan on over 1.5 mil Skall.

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    I wouldn't say "well", as I've become an out of shape wreck after the third chronic injury, but it could be worse. Thanks anyway. :)

  • @epiqur6574
    @epiqur6574Ай бұрын

    Man, I love those cutting montages. I know it probably doesn't get to many views, but there's something about a sword cutting mats to nice calm atmospheric music to me.

  • @kyuken893
    @kyuken893Ай бұрын

    Me hearing the sword noises and hoping for more Skallwave

  • @marcelhaniger2795
    @marcelhaniger2795Ай бұрын

    Yet again I was glued to the screen and immensely interested in as well as entertained by the topic in general, so it caught me by surprise when you said "as this was a pretty dry topic..."^^ Then again I'm a sucker for curiosities of all kinds so even more reason to like videos with topics of exceptionalities/extremes, be it price, rarity, fancyness, cutting capacity, size, you name it. Honestly, I could have listened to you listing swords and their prices as well as your input/expertise as to how that prices comes to exists for another 30 minutes minimum.

  • @DylanMatthewTurner
    @DylanMatthewTurnerАй бұрын

    Prices are ultimately set by the consumer. If you want to sell something for X price, and you can't convince people it's worth that price, you're not gonna sell it; you're gonna keep it lol

  • @pyridonfaltis9761

    @pyridonfaltis9761

    Ай бұрын

    If it is exclusive enough, someone will (probably) pay for it, if for no other reason, then for bragging rights.

  • @Roland3ld
    @Roland3ldАй бұрын

    I appreciate the wordplay and puns from this video Skallagrim, they were clever and really funny.

  • @radoslavakov4693
    @radoslavakov4693Ай бұрын

    That Medieval Prices and Income link is very nice to have. Ive been searching on and off for such information for so long yet I never found anything concrete. Goes to show that if you don't know where to look you'll not find it. Good thing you give your wealth of information freely.

  • @UnsheathedSwordReviews
    @UnsheathedSwordReviewsАй бұрын

    Great review! Very informative, I especially liked the break down of pay vs cost from back in the day.

  • @baraka629
    @baraka629Ай бұрын

    Value is the most subjective measure imaginable. The market is just a distributed consensus across all people's subjective opinions about value. So whenever we ask "how much is something worth" we have to add the qualifier "to whom". As in, "how much is this item worth to me/to the average person/to my neighbour down the street (etc)"

  • @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    Ай бұрын

    Or we could do our best to focus on intrinsic value. Though this video isn't about that.

  • @bigmike-

    @bigmike-

    Ай бұрын

    @@3xeplodng_3agle_studios How would you quantify intrinsic value?

  • @charliericker274

    @charliericker274

    Ай бұрын

    @@3xeplodng_3agle_studios Do you mean build quality, effectiveness, durability, etc? That is what most of this guys videos are about as far as sword reviews go. In that case, this 100 million dollar Katana is no more valuable than any high quality blade. Obviously I don't own the 100 million dollar one, so I can't say for sure, but I am guessing it's a really well made blade from the era in which it was made and is comparable to other high quality pieces from that era.

  • @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    Ай бұрын

    @@charliericker274 somewhat. But more so the value of what made it- materials, labor. Its value without any. You seem to get exactly where I was coming from honestly. As a sword- *_just_* a sword- it has no more value than another of comparable quality if made today

  • @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    @3xeplodng_3agle_studios

    Ай бұрын

    @@bigmike- Intrinsic in the instance I used it was outlined in the comment I made directly before this, to another commenter as I didn't see your response until just now, but to go Into it further, mind you its slightly convoluted, If I had an "idealized" version of intrinsic value, that in such case would technically be separate but not totally removed from the dictionary definition; I'd say it would best be measured by - The value of materials used in creation and if that usage was the most efficient or lastingly useful application of said materials; I.e- what else(if anything) could those raw materials have been put to and would it have been a more efficient usage? Less? About equal? The value of labor (how many hours of labor it took to secure the raw materials, how dangerous and/or tedious to the people doing so, and then the same for refinement/processing into usable materials, then the same for the creation of the tool, object, etc.) The utility of the work produced(how useful is it in its intended field and how many other uses does it have that it works well at) *_Specifically in the case of historical artifacts,_* add in the following (which were covered in the video) How old is it, and how well preserved for its age and the materials used? (scientifically: if a material has x rate of decay but the example in question has only seen about half that, it'd be extremely well-preserved, there's more data to be had from it and depending on the piece and its age, more usage). Therefore concurrent with and somewhat denoted by that- quality Does it have any notable historical significance or is it just another "run of the mill" example? Along with the historical significance- did SOMEBODY historically significant own/use it? Is it the only one to exist(rarity/scarcity) Levy all applicable factors, and use them to produce an average, that average is what I would call a "true" value.

  • @seanreber9064
    @seanreber9064Ай бұрын

    These are my favorite kind of videos you do. Thanks!

  • @highestqualitypigiron
    @highestqualitypigironАй бұрын

    This was a really great educational and also entertaining video. Im really appreciating this more history focused approach youve been doing recently

  • @zealot777
    @zealot777Ай бұрын

    Nice little video explaining "value" of swords, thanks for posting. Your custom made falchion is priceless...a true artifact.

  • @jeanladoire4141
    @jeanladoire4141Ай бұрын

    I'm impressed at how cheap swords were... Only 1 day of skilled work's salary to buy a simple sword?? Nowadays if you ask a bladesmith, even a crude sword would cost more than that (and we have modern tools to speed up the process)

  • @MrSignman65

    @MrSignman65

    Ай бұрын

    True, but people don't need to buy swords for self-defense or war nowadays. They're a novelty/hobbyist item and makers have to boost the price because otherwise it wouldn't be a sustainable business.

  • @TheCraziestFox

    @TheCraziestFox

    Ай бұрын

    How much is a cheap machete where you live? Is it more than a day's worth of income?

  • @jeanladoire4141

    @jeanladoire4141

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheCraziestFox i'm a bladesmith and i'm not making a machete below 200 euros, and a crude but properly made sword would be at least 800 euros

  • @TheCraziestFox

    @TheCraziestFox

    Ай бұрын

    There is a guy that sells stock removal made falchions and messers. Pretty decent quality too. 50-60€ a piece. I'm planning to buy a falchion from him the week after next.

  • @jeanladoire4141

    @jeanladoire4141

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheCraziestFox no way it's decent quality for this cheap

  • @karasek2001
    @karasek2001Ай бұрын

    As usual doing the thing for the thing. Thank you for this amazing video Skall ❤️

  • @trumpetwizard7250
    @trumpetwizard7250Ай бұрын

    A very well-made video! I can see you've put a lot of thought into how it's edited! It keeps the viewer's attention very well.

  • @murphylhunn
    @murphylhunn29 күн бұрын

    I love videos like this! More skall explaining stuff plz

  • @helpdeskjnp
    @helpdeskjnp4 күн бұрын

    Best video I’ve seen in a while, especially with the ending/outro cutting series..

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395Ай бұрын

    Ilya said once that: "in the Middle Ages, high quality materials were expensive but labor was cheap, and a good sword could last a lifetime." He pointed out that high quality monosteels are common, while the costs of labor are expensive. It's true to a point, of course, but craftsmanship quality still matters, and while you can get quality from cheap labor in the current era, what a person is typically paying for is consistent quality and reliability. It's something that is less conceptually relevant to modern people when it comes to swords compared to something like smartphones, cars, etc.

  • @althesmith

    @althesmith

    Ай бұрын

    A military engineer in a treatise from the 1500's said iirc that in general smiths forge iron well and steel badly, or steel well and iron badly. At that time, there was no "structural steel"- to be considered steel metal had to harden decently when quenched. Steel needed to be worked at lower temperatures than iron, whereas iron needed to be welded at temperatures that would damage steel.

  • @althesmith

    @althesmith

    Ай бұрын

    Now time to get out to my forge and weld up some steel.

  • @CouchAlien
    @CouchAlienАй бұрын

    Love your channel alot skallagrim, please never stop being you dude ⚔️🤙

  • @hendrix24
    @hendrix24Ай бұрын

    That sword that was made for you looks so sick. If someone made a sword for me I would cry and pledge my lifelong devotion to them. So cool.

  • @Kieran_Martin
    @Kieran_MartinАй бұрын

    I really liked the timelapse part at the end, it was oddly satisfying.

  • @d9720267
    @d9720267Ай бұрын

    My God man, you could do an entire series on this. Nothing dry about it!

  • @NDOhioan
    @NDOhioanАй бұрын

    Another point worth mentioning in how a sword's age affects its value is that historically, old swords would often remain in circulation as second-hand items. If someone of low status was willing to buy a sword that was God-knows-how-old, worn from use and likely riddled with rust, he'd be able to do so. It wouldn't be a *good* sword, but it would *still* be a sword.

  • @user-lg1ex8ic8v
    @user-lg1ex8ic8vАй бұрын

    bro your content is so good god bless

  • @johns6095
    @johns6095Ай бұрын

    I would like to see more videos about the weapons used by the Aisin-Gioro house.

  • @bhorrthunderhoof4925
    @bhorrthunderhoof4925Ай бұрын

    Well explained!

  • @justpassingbyy
    @justpassingbyyАй бұрын

    An in-depth dive into the value of swords and armor in relation to the wages of different occupations and cost of other goods and services could be an entire video. I would love to see that.

  • @Markbell73
    @Markbell73Ай бұрын

    Those cuts from timestamp 9:58 to 10:10 were gorgeous!!!!!

  • @Kenny77557
    @Kenny77557Ай бұрын

    Great video!

  • @PsyKotyK
    @PsyKotyKАй бұрын

    Great video skal

  • @user-rw2hz8kj2n
    @user-rw2hz8kj2nАй бұрын

    You can swing dat thing bro,1st time I've ever seen you mte ,really good vid...

  • @ThingsThatIDo
    @ThingsThatIDo21 күн бұрын

    "Always good to be skeptical" 100%

  • @red833
    @red833Ай бұрын

    Always interesting Skallagrim 👍

  • @sivelti3914
    @sivelti3914Ай бұрын

    Interesting video again, lots of pretty swords.

  • @dorukgolcu9191
    @dorukgolcu9191Ай бұрын

    As a fantasy illustrator, I can write swords off of my taxes as reference materials. I do not abuse this...

  • @mikec4430
    @mikec4430Ай бұрын

    great vid, very interesting.

  • @khagnnorran7745
    @khagnnorran7745Ай бұрын

    a very nice and realxed vid

  • @effigytormented
    @effigytormentedАй бұрын

    Keep on trucking Skall.

  • @RetroO7
    @RetroO7Ай бұрын

    I can also imagine rather than being purchased, many swords were passed down from the previous generation or acquired from battlefields by the victors or even scavengers of dead warriors

  • @ronwingrove683
    @ronwingrove683Ай бұрын

    Skall ending the video by showing us a million dollars in cut-up tatami mats is the real flex here.

  • @hectornieves3889
    @hectornieves3889Ай бұрын

    Bro luv your content. U welcome in puerto Rico anytime

  • @JackEspadas
    @JackEspadasАй бұрын

    Finally some Skall content

  • @Rodclutcher
    @RodclutcherАй бұрын

    Love this video

  • @sinisterswordsman25
    @sinisterswordsman25Ай бұрын

    I will never be more envious of anything than I am of the skallchion

  • @georgegeorge1368
    @georgegeorge1368Ай бұрын

    Cool very cool, thanks for the video

  • @NinjaRabies
    @NinjaRabiesАй бұрын

    Oh yes, give us that cutting compilation goodness

  • @TheViralInfekT
    @TheViralInfekTАй бұрын

    The Skalchion is such a beautiful sword. Ilya and Matt made something fantastic.

  • @IdinDunifin
    @IdinDunifinАй бұрын

    Ever consider doing a video on the lochaber axe? If like to see some scrutiny on that weapon.

  • @vladdracula2643
    @vladdracula2643Ай бұрын

    Some of the examples shown are so beautiful. It's such a strange and fun world where such a work of art is a butchers tool.

  • @mathhews95
    @mathhews95Ай бұрын

    Interesting lesson there about the medieval prices

  • @RuneChaosMarine
    @RuneChaosMarineАй бұрын

    @7:13 the 'Skallcion' !! Behold! truly a worthy blade of reknown and history. a true treasure! tangible wealth! an absolute asset!

  • @weonconpatasbreadcake6494
    @weonconpatasbreadcake6494Ай бұрын

    cool collection of swords :)

  • @Kris_Stiletto
    @Kris_StilettoАй бұрын

    Man, your Swords cut those Mats like a hot knife going through butter! Well done! :-) Peace, Stiletto :-)

  • @niklasfischer3915
    @niklasfischer3915Ай бұрын

    I think the value of the Skallchion is probably closer to 3k than 2k...the complex fullering, spine decorations, laminated 3-layered steel construction, complex forged guard with siderings and a wire wrap...I remember Ilya saying that his prices for simple swords start at about 2k...considering those extra features I think the price would be at least 3k-3,5k today.

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, sounds plausible.

  • @Jhaldmer
    @JhaldmerАй бұрын

    Damn... Napoleon's sword was gorgeous.

  • @Enigma..
    @Enigma..Ай бұрын

    That personally crafted sword is awesome af

  • @iandegiovani4703
    @iandegiovani4703Ай бұрын

    Great vid

  • @alexandremattos6182
    @alexandremattos6182Ай бұрын

    Tangential to the sword topic, but into the 'relative value' one, there are also very rich people that use art and antiques as a way exploit tax loopholes and/or moove large sums of money outside of the banking system. A rich guy buying a sword and rewarding it to a museum will get a substantial tax benefit in many places.

  • @emilliebich7004
    @emilliebich7004Ай бұрын

    I ALWAYS forget how funny, calming and overall entertaining skalls videos are. Theyre a nice contrast between all the shorts, the drama and attention seeking stuff out there. A calm place u return to when u want to rest for a while, like meeting an old friend u havent seen in a while. One thing I want to point out was a long time ago when the war between russia and ukraine startet. Joerg Sprave who sent skall the spearhead-Dagger postet a Video in wich he wantet more weapons in Homes and talked of how much they would provide savety wich...they dont. And at the same time skall postet a vlog and I think to remember that it even was on a graveyard, where he talked about how worse and absoluteley cruel it is to harm and even kill each other. What I wanted to say is, Joerg lost a fan and skall earned not only a supscripion but also my deepest thank for just beeing out there. Thank you. Jesus, having only one Kidney does make u drunk faster...

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    I appreciate it, although you were probably too hard on Joerg there. While I'm very much anti-war I'm also in favor of (justified) self-defense by whatever means necessary. As long as you're responsible about it and don't fall for a false sense of security I don't see a problem with it, although I also understand your skepticism.

  • @TheRedStig
    @TheRedStigАй бұрын

    I would hate to put a value on a piece so special and sentimental as the Skalchion. However, it wouldn't surprise me in the least if, one mad day you decided to auction it, it could sell in excess of $7,000. Beautiful craftsmanship and finish, functional and sharp, as a blade should be. Fantastic from top to bottom and all goes to the smiths for that. Well done.

  • @anonymousbosch9265
    @anonymousbosch9265Ай бұрын

    I’m coming up on the 6 month mark for my Landskencht Gottfried sharp and I can’t wait

  • @danjager6200
    @danjager6200Ай бұрын

    I didn't find this dry at all. It was very interesting. I would have liked to see even more aspects of appraisal. Pick random swords and give the value you might pay for them and why.

  • @Deltarious
    @DeltariousАй бұрын

    There *are* objective factors to value and cost- fundamentally the cost of things represents the equivalent value of "productive work" that is placed against the object or thing. In modern economies and *doubly* with art these factors become detached or obscured from being directly connected by several layers but they *do* still fundamentally underpin the value even though lots of factors can now distort and 'push' or 'pull' on the value, and many of these (but not all) are also objective factors too. It's just that when taken all together there are *so many* factors that it stops making sense on a 'human scale' as it is a very complicated picture now instead of a direct relationship. ...having said all that, when something transcends to the 'art' or 'collector' market emotions start playing a bigger and bigger part of the value and so the price is essentially 'testing' how much attachment to the object one party has compared to another since they are getting something that has a practical utility value of zero...unlessss they are also looking to sell it or hold it as an asset with collateral, and now you see why even art gets complicated when it comes to being able to represent 'real' value (and why it is so prone to funny tax games!)

  • @darkhawk368
    @darkhawk368Ай бұрын

    Was super bummed when I finally saved up enough for the albion knect and I was off the market

  • @casinferneycf45
    @casinferneycf45Ай бұрын

    I have often wondered about that, or rather I use to. Once I started making things like axes and knives for sale I quickly realized that the asking price of 300 dollars plus for a hand made knife is actually really reasonable unless you have a very large scale of production.

  • @RuneChaosMarine
    @RuneChaosMarineАй бұрын

    @8:11 get a 'sticklestad viking sword' by windalss steel crafts please. i have wanted one since 2005.

  • @NateGLJ
    @NateGLJАй бұрын

    The oakshot LS cuts are so clean. Also the custom falchion good too.

  • @EarthtoneEmar
    @EarthtoneEmar19 күн бұрын

    3:48 he doesn't look too concerned 😵

  • @stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369
    @stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369Ай бұрын

    Those swords, oh my goodness such style

  • @somberflight
    @somberflightАй бұрын

    3:45 does anyone know what book/manuscript that image is from on the left?

  • @Boredandhere
    @BoredandhereАй бұрын

    I feel like that custom forged Skallchion should be worth $5K minimum and could probably sell for $10k

  • @user-re1hy6if7d
    @user-re1hy6if7dАй бұрын

    What do you do with the pieces of tatami mats cut off? Compost? Glue 'em back together?

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    Compost.

  • @KevinAxe8
    @KevinAxe8Ай бұрын

    I got a feeling that this video will perform well in the algorithm

  • @jackmorrison5272
    @jackmorrison5272Ай бұрын

    ❤ your content

  • @robbierobdergrutzkopfderwa2566
    @robbierobdergrutzkopfderwa2566Ай бұрын

    Wake up, new skallvideo just dropped!

  • @gj1234567899999
    @gj1234567899999Ай бұрын

    The worst overpriced stuff are baseball cards. 😂 1 million for some old cardboard! 😂

  • @Bubben246

    @Bubben246

    Ай бұрын

    Is that better or worse than the "One of One One Ring" from MtG?

  • @kuronoch.1441

    @kuronoch.1441

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Bubben246Worse. People are still searching for that legendary Honus Wagner card.

  • @jaredzochert2495
    @jaredzochert2495Ай бұрын

    Watching the end of the video made me wonder… are tatami mats fairly accurate analogs for limbs? I noticed some of the mats had a center dowel-like support. Do these types of mats reflect what an actual strike to an arm could look like? That might make for an interesting video. 😁

  • @rafaelt8589
    @rafaelt8589Ай бұрын

    Slash for your shekel caught me off guard

  • @Zoabdy
    @ZoabdyАй бұрын

    Harbor Freight has taught me that a sword shouldn't cost more than $20

  • @ridirefain6606
    @ridirefain6606Ай бұрын

    Being a martial artist and collector of medieval weapons, over the years I come to appreciate the difference of a well-crafted, handmade blade. (Technically albeit I am sure power hammers and grinders were used.) I own things for LK Chen, Cold Steel, Windlass and Valient Arms. The Valient arms products are like Albion product custom made, expensive, with a year long waiting list. There is no comparison to the quality of between one of these blades to most items made by any of the mass-produced blades from these fine companies. Especially the Windlass a decent and durable product, but still, the steel seems cheap by comparison and its edge would most likely get notched in direct contact.

  • @xyreniaofcthrayn1195
    @xyreniaofcthrayn1195Ай бұрын

    The title: my answer: A lifetime, like any weapon. Monetarily and archaeologically speaking this video covers this though.

  • @WhatIfBrigade
    @WhatIfBrigadeАй бұрын

    On labor costs, I also see people forget about overtime pay. If a company has a huge backlog, it might more sense to pay overtime to workers to try to catch up even if labor costs could be lower if they accepted longer wait times.

  • @JohnnyLund-lc4ez
    @JohnnyLund-lc4ez20 күн бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @andrewszigeti2174
    @andrewszigeti2174Ай бұрын

    Like most things, a sword's value is "Whatever you can convince someone to pay for it."

  • @scottyelder8351
    @scottyelder8351Ай бұрын

    This was class cheer's Skall !

  • @justincarrasco3680
    @justincarrasco3680Ай бұрын

    The Skallchion's totally unnecessary Italian Renaissance fullers are so damn cool.

  • @MartinGreywolf
    @MartinGreywolfАй бұрын

    One more cost that everyone forgets is the cost of expertise: you are not paying just for that one sword, you are also paying a fraction of the cost of all the swords craftsman screwed up to get to a point where they were capable of making that sword.

  • @MacKravitz
    @MacKravitzАй бұрын

    What do you do with chopped up tatami, anyway? Is it compostable, or can you burn the scraps in your wood stove?

  • @moddedpan4252
    @moddedpan4252Ай бұрын

    I like the sprite for the sword on skall's shirt, reminds me of the way some terraria items look

  • @Skallagrim

    @Skallagrim

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, I had it commissioned based on the pixel art style of 90s RPGs (and now indie games). You can get one by the way. :) www.bonfire.com/store/skallswag/

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