IRISH CELTIC RINGS - STERLING SILVER WHOLESALE RINGS - MOST POPULAR ENGAGEMENT RING CUT.
Up for sale is a reproduction of the Irish Bastard Sword that features a traditional Irish ringed hilt pommel. This sword features a high quality carbon steel constructed blade. The blade is slightly sharpened and has very sharp point. A ridge has been added down the center of the blade. The blade is well balanced, very light, very quick, and features a rat tang. The guard of the sword is solid steel with cut off cross arms. The handle of the sword is made by wood over the rat tang of the sword. Black leather wraps around the handle to give maximum grip. The pommel of the sword is the Irish circle cut out with the tang of the sword running through the middle of the circle. The pommel ends with a rivet cap securing the tang. Come with the sword is a scabbard constructed by wood with a black leather cover. The drag of the sword is burnished steel with a ball point tip. The scabbard throat is also the same burnished steel that perfectly contours the guard of the sword.
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My celtic knot ring. I got it for my middle finger so when I flip somebody off I can show my Irish pride at the same time!
CELTIC WOMAN - DVD Movie
Gorgeous to listen to and gorgeous to look at, Celtic Woman is perfect PBS fare, sort of a Riverdance without the dancing. Drawing on the same New Age-y sound and propulsive energy as that show's solo-voice and choral numbers, the live concert features four attractive young women in strapless evening gowns with soaring voices backed by an orchestra, an Anuna-like chorus, and a large percussion section. The more traditional fare includes Meav Ni Mhaolchatha's "Danny Boy" and "She Moved Through the Fair," and Chloe Agnew's "Ave Maria" (the Bach-Gounod version). Movie and TV selections range from Agnew's "Walking in the Air" (The Snowman) and "Someday" (Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame) to Lisa Kelly's "May It Be" (the Enya song from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the King) and Orla Fallon's voice and harp rendition of "Harry's Game." A fifth woman, Mairead Nesbitt, adds some variety by fiddling "The Butterfly" and "Ashokan Farewell" (best known as the theme from Ken Burns's The Civil War). Occasionally the singers join together, as in Enya's "Orinoco Flow," an a cappella rendition of West Side Story's "Somewhere," music director David Downes's composition "One World," and a stately version of "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." Celtic Woman was created by Downes (like many of the other performers, a Riverdance veteran) along with Sharon Browne and Dave Kavanagh of the Celtic Collections record label. --David Horiuchi