Apart from the type
B tiger bells as they are attached to the belts as seen in the
Tibetan Refugee market in New
Delhi and the belt given below, there is only one report: a tiger
bell of the smaller type B.
However according to several shop owners and antique dealers in
Nepal, tiger bells of the C
type are produced until this very day in factories in Dehra
Dunn (Uttar Pradesh, near the border with Himachal Pradesh) and
Rajpur, for the Tibetan and Nepalese market.
Hans Brandeis, ethnomusicologist in Berlin, reports:
I noticed the tiger bells in 1997 inside a glass cabinet
in the basement of the Museum für Völkerkunde. I could
not take them out. But the objects in that cabinet were from India.
I could see the archive number: 103.315.
The tiger bells were mounted on a leather strip, probably about
10 pieces, of which 8 bells are visible in the picture
This a yak or horse belt,.similar to those in the Tibetan Refugee
market in New Delhi.

Photograph: courtesy Hans Brandeis
A tiger bell of the smaller type
B, in a shop in Mahabalipuram (1990, Tamil nadu), now in the
author's collection. No details were known and there are no other
indications that tiger bells occur in this area.
Assam, Nagaland
Group: Naga
Several strands of small metal sequins, strung as necklaces, with
two or three tiger bells and ordinary bells. The strands have probably
been restrung for trading purposes. Originally they were much longer
and were worn by Naga women around the upper body. The tiger bells
are of an unusual type.
Type A comes
closest but the bells were probably newly made in the area.
Reported by
Rinus van Huijksloot who has several of these strands
in his shop, the
Nusantara Museum shop in Delft (Neth). Also
see several photographs in
The Nagas, hill people of Northeast
India by
Julian Jacobs, published by
Thames and Hudson.