rjgimp wrote:I find a .22 to be very effective but in close quarters a wrist rocket will do.
Gold5one wrote:...
Hiding under some wood on the pile I discovered a vintage ( My age or older) wood carving- I checked Tineye image search and there were zero matches, so this could be a one of a kind= $1000! - and I saved the last one in the world from the garbage truck.
Actually, I asked an antique furniture restorer and he said after WW2 Asian wood carved pieces similar to this showed up for sale or were brought back by military servicemen. I wish it could talk to me.
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working on it wrote:Gold5one wrote:...
Hiding under some wood on the pile I discovered a vintage ( My age or older) wood carving- I checked Tineye image search and there were zero matches, so this could be a one of a kind= $1000! - and I saved the last one in the world from the garbage truck.
Actually, I asked an antique furniture restorer and he said after WW2 Asian wood carved pieces similar to this showed up for sale or were brought back by military servicemen. I wish it could talk to me.
...
That looks quite similar to carved panels, furniture, and household decorations that my dad's sister sent back from the Philippines between '47? and '56, while her husband was stationed at Clark Field (AFB). After that, they were moved to James Connally Air Force Base, just south of our family's home area, Dallas-Fort Worth, so no more Asian carvings were forthcoming.
I remember seeing full walls of carved panels, a complete bedroom suite in my aunt's house, and every older relative had tons of the decorations in many rooms of their houses. There was also a lot of bronze stuff sent back home, but I don't know what country they came from. I actually received one thing from the Philippines, a decorated shield that had tribal knives and weapons displayed on it (cut from tin), when I was 6, IIRC. It hung on my bedroom wall until I moved away in '70. Don't know what happened to it, or any of the other stuff, after the families lost contact/moved on/died out by 2000. Some of it might've been valuable, but who knows?
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