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When was your first commission?

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 7:37 pm
by AaronT
And what was it?

Mine was Oct '04

Boot armour for a fighter.

And I'm so motivated that I am going to sleep with my hammers and patterns tonite.

HOOAH!!!

And how many commissions have you filled since?

Me, I may have another for a set of boot armour.

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 7:45 pm
by Uilleag
My first commission was a pair of tooled vanbraces in the spring of '97. I saw a picture of them recently....they were horrendously ugly! :D

I've filled more than I have been able to keep count since then.....I'm a squire, I have a hard time counting past 3. :twisted:

I'm currently in varrying stages of work on about 18 commissions. I've recently taken in commissions for some cuirasses, that I'm really looking forward to. Body armour is a real joy to make, I especially love the flow of the body harness into pauldrons and leg harnesses. Done correctly the lines are just wonderful.....Its getting the lines to flow that I am learning to get better at......

I don't sleep with my tools and such, the girlfriend has enough problems dodging all of that stuff throughout the rest of the apartment....she prefers a less clutered sleeping area! :twisted:

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:05 pm
by AaronT
House of the Wolf wrote:My first commission was a pair of tooled vanbraces in the spring of '97. I saw a picture of them recently....they were horrendously ugly! :D

I've filled more than I have been able to keep count since then.....I'm a squire, I have a hard time counting past 3. :twisted:

I'm currently in varrying stages of work on about 18 commissions. I've recently taken in commissions for some cuirasses, that I'm really looking forward to. Body armour is a real joy to make, I especially love the flow of the body harness into pauldrons and leg harnesses. Done correctly the lines are just wonderful.....Its getting the lines to flow that I am learning to get better at......

I don't sleep with my tools and such, the girlfriend has enough problems dodging all of that stuff throughout the rest of the apartment....she prefers a less clutered sleeping area! :twisted:


:shock: :shock: :shock: 18 commissions.
One day, I will attain the skills and knowledge required to accomplish this.

Are you a full time armourer?

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:42 pm
by Uilleag
Yes, I am a full-time armourer.....I post so often, I keep forgetting that we have new members all of the time. :)

I deal completely with leather armour. If you get a chance check out my website. The url is part of my sig line.

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:55 pm
by Gerhard von Liebau
House of the Wolf wrote:Yes, I am a full-time armourer.....I post so often, I keep forgetting that we have new members all of the time. :)

I deal completely with leather armour. If you get a chance check out my website. The url is part of my sig line.


Lol, sir... He's not a new member:p. He's posted around here more than you! ;)

As for my own commissions, I have done none, yet. I'm interested in Bronze Age equipment, and after I finish up a couple more sets of my own stuff, I hope to start making some nice, authentic shields for people. Currently I've got one completed shield to sell, which I hope to get around $75 for. Several more are on the way. These are and will all be of Egyptian Origin, but are done with a cheaters skills.

-Gregory-

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 9:00 pm
by Uilleag
Gregory J. Liebau wrote:Lol, sir... He's not a new member:p. He's posted around here more than you! ;)


Don't I feel like a dweeb! :oops: Should have read his info before posting. :lol:

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 9:05 pm
by Thomas H
may-ish last year. it was a buckler for someone at my archery club. 18g mild £10

First commission....

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 9:09 pm
by Halberds
This: A sugarloaf in 14 ga. mild steel for member Uryen in the land of Oz.
In the winter of 1999.... I have been doing this for 5 years now.
Image

In return, I received a mail coif that is impervious to spears, arrows, swords and axes. The most dense liquid metal I have ever held or had the privilege to wear.

I lost count a long time ago on how many commissions I have filled.
If I think about it.... they may be counted on my 2 hands.

Halberds

Ps: This is one of my favorites:
http://home.armourarchive.org/members/h ... Cobra5.jpg
I appreciate the opportunity to do fantasy.

(edited to add some more bullshit

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 9:56 pm
by AB Hammer
1987 I was helping Small Grey Bear to give up some freon helms and providing them with Barrel helms and spun tops, I look back, but it was all we had back then. I am so glad thangs have changed.

In blunt terms when I started we went from bad to fair then 2 years later we started looking good. (for that time period)

AB Hammer

Posted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 11:59 pm
by Kaliban
Hmm hard to say it was 8 yrs ago that I remember .. Should have taken more pics .. well should have taken pics when I started .. :)

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 1:50 am
by ARMOURER ERIC
March 1983, spun dome grille face. A newbie helm for a college student in Wheeling West Virginia, IIRC, Brendan Rowan, last ran into him at Pennsic 1996, was now a Laurel. Took me 13 hours to make, got $65


Eric

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 3:23 am
by LordWulf
About a month ago, got comissioned to make two sets of Wisby for Youth Combat and it has since snowballed into something I am enjoying immensely....... and thanks to ya'll here it's a heck of a lot easier with the knowledge and advice that runs rampant through here....

I've filled 4 other commissions for the Wisby's so far and have 2 looking at the "Charred Hyena"

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 9:22 am
by Mike F
I made a 14 gauge stainless steel standoff for a brake pedal. My mother is short. :)

Otherwise I don't feel confident enough (and until now, was busy with my own stuff) to ask around, and nobody had more than a passing interest in having anything.

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 10:15 am
by Duane W
1979 - Barrel Helm (16 ga. black iron - Polidor pattern) with a pair of shield rims (1/8" x 3/4" bar stock hammered cold to fit the face of a 24" round shield)

Got $50.00 for the helm and $25.00 for the rims which was a small fortune to a starving college student.



Alexander Caithnes

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 10:29 am
by Templar Bob/De Tyre
My first commission was in 1986. It was for a knee-length leather lamellar klibanion, leather lamellar gorget, articulated steel and leather leg and arm harness for the late Amir Jafar as-Safa. This was his first SCA armour.

The lamellar was leather Tandy practice pieces. It took the better part of spring to build, and had a total of 558 lamellae. The leg and arm harness took a weekend.

Total cost was $150.00.

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 10:43 am
by Kenwrec Wulfe
Officially, this past summer.

Coat of Plates for a friend of T-Bob.

Prior to that, I finished the scales for T-Bob's scaled curiass (which, BTW, I have not seen yet T-Bob!!) - if you want to count that as a first commision.

Currently, I am working on my own armour (full suit late 14th c transitional) and 3 other commissions aside from the normal stuff (loaner gear and shiremate gear repair)

I am mostly a hobbyist at the moment.

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 10:45 am
by Sasuke
January 2001 for aluminum greaves. 42 commissions since then. Many of those were for full suits or multiple items. I hope to go full time in a few years.

Chris

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 11:30 am
by Artorious
Delivered it Sunday at fighter practice. The Byzantine helm with the Brass Wolves on it that I posted last week. Customer loved it and it fit great.

I've sold a couple pieces before but that was my first actual commision for armour.

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 6:36 pm
by taltosh
My first commission was back in 1988, it was for a knee length hauberk, I was only 16 at the time and I got 450$ for it, a real fortune. Mind you the guy I made it for was 6'2" and the whole piece was close to 40000 rings when complete and that was before I learned to power wind coils.

Since then I've sort diverted from maille, though I make rivited maille now. I mostly do tooled leather commissions nowadays and the odd woodworking and metalworking project.

Cheers

Posted: Wed Dec 15, 2004 8:10 pm
by AB Hammer
I have to say it, this way people can see how much we sometimes work for.

taltosh; It looks like you got a little over a penny a ring. No offence I have made them for less.


Have a great day

AB Hammer

Posted: Thu Dec 16, 2004 12:07 pm
by Otto
Something like 21 years ago, give or take... Most likely, it was a homely but functional spangenhelm.

All this time and hundreds of commissions later... and I'm still not very good at it. Oh well, perhaps I should teach, since I can't seem to do! :)