First post on this board.
I guess it's the best place for my question.
I found this shield under my parents house.
It's cast iron and made to hang on the wall. Most likely a tourist product but my parents had no idea they even had it, havn't gotten it themselves.
I just want to see if any of you guys would recognize who the man is.
Might be depicting Ajax.
>>1710109
Yeah I can see that, although he has a spear instead of a shortsword.
I'm also confused the the surrounding faces, the one at the top seems to resemble faces from india, the others from christian art.
I'm sure it's a mishmash of "cool shit", but the mold is quite well made.
There are no stamps of what I can find.
>>1710140
This is probably made in the late 19th century (1870 or so). They had an obsession with classical and medieval stuff and just threw anything that's cool on there.
Here is one with some weird medieval images and what I think is hercules in the middle.
Ajax is sometimes depicted with a sword and shield. You can see examples on coins.
>>1710200
Ah, nice.
Well I guess it's safe to polish the rust off and keep it on my wall then.
Thanks for the help!
>>1710211
>Well I guess it's safe to polish the rust off
Don't. Don't ever do this with antiques.
>>1710212
>antique
1870 isn't considered antique is it?
Sure, there might not be many of these shields left, but it's still nothing spectacular.
It's cast iron, not hand crafted.
>>1710212
To elaborate: Rust is just the outer layer of the object which has undergone oxygenation. When you 'polish the rust off' you're stripping the entire exterior of the object off of it. Not only does this constitute damage itself, but now it's exposed what used to be protected to more oxidation.
>>1710217
>1870 isn't considered antique is it?
Generally speaking, antique means at least 100 years.
>Sure, there might not be many of these shields left, but it's still nothing spectacular.
Nothing spectacular, but it's still a really nifty item you got there, and that niftiness is only going to increase with time.
It's Iron, so you're never even going to get the nice shine you temporarily get from scrapping off the tarnish off silver.
>>1710235
>I'm talking about kitchen grade scotch brite
I audibly winced. Please, please do not do this. This is like, the number 1 most common problem with antiques.
>>1710243
I'LL FUCKING DO IT ANON, THERE'S NOTHING YOU CAN DO TO STOP ME!
>>1710235
Please give this away to a museum for safekeeping because what you said physically hurt me.
>>1710262
If I polish it up, I can sell it for more money!
>>1710328
No, no. You'll reduce the monetary value by half, at least.
>>1710246
Hope that shit is cursed and your whole family gets slaughtered.
>>1709925
where are you from?
>>1710409
Scandinavia, which is why I find it weird that a greek oriented shield is here.
>>1710413
that is weird. look really hard for a "made in china" on it.
i found a roman styled sword in my garage that i thought was cool as fuck and i told everyone about it, but after a while i saw "made in italy" on it.
>>1710429
That's what I did earlier when checking out how I'd remove the rust.
No stamps either.
>>1710211
No problem m8.
>>1710262
Removing some surface rust carefully won't hurt its value, which is probably not that much to begin with. And what museum would you even give this to?
Removing rust and polishing is a problem with very old items, or items with a delicate surface. Since, as you mentioned, you risk removing a large layer of the item and risk damage. No one gives a crap if you remove some rust from a late 19th early 20th century cast iron item.