2mm fort the helm and 1.5 mm for the visor :
pig face
pig face
I've finished a pig face bassinet :
2mm fort the helm and 1.5 mm for the visor :

2mm fort the helm and 1.5 mm for the visor :
sorry , y speak englisch like spanish cow ..
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Konstantin the Red
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Bienvenu, Sire Eric! Que vous vous restez ici longtemps, et ca vous servira bien.
A tall bascinet skull like that one would also go well with late fourteenth-century Scottish Highlands and Islands armours. They liked tall, pointy hats then.
Your workmanship is very good! We don't usually see such neatly done charnel-hinges on bascinets, and your forming of the bascinet skull looks as fancy as Burgundians would have done it.
A tall bascinet skull like that one would also go well with late fourteenth-century Scottish Highlands and Islands armours. They liked tall, pointy hats then.
Your workmanship is very good! We don't usually see such neatly done charnel-hinges on bascinets, and your forming of the bascinet skull looks as fancy as Burgundians would have done it.
"The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone..."
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"your forming of the bascinet skull looks as fancy as Burgundians would have done it. "
I'm from Lorraine !
Bugundians are not ours friends in this times
But thank for yours compliments !
but i dont' know that good for Scottish Highlands and Islands armours !
i'm very surprised because i want making german helm
I'm from Lorraine !
Bugundians are not ours friends in this times
But thank for yours compliments !
but i dont' know that good for Scottish Highlands and Islands armours !
i'm very surprised because i want making german helm
sorry , y speak englisch like spanish cow ..
- Galfrid atte grene
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Konstantin the Red
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sire eric wrote:but i dont' know that good for Scottish Highlands and Islands armours !
i'm very surprised because i want making german helm
Okay, Burgundy and Lorraine fought a lot, back then -- I'll remember!
Yes indeed, armor in that corner of the British Isles was obscure, and nobody really knows a lot about it -- I think we know more about their swords, really. And there wasn't much of it anyway: a quilted cotun of cloth for defending the body from neck to knees, tall iron helmets of several kinds (the tall bascinet seemed the latest kind, possibly used through the fourteenth century and some of the fifteenth), which they called clogaids and some of which had a sort of quilted cloth camail made like the cotuns. Leg armor? -- except for the Anglo-Irish knightly figure carved into a pillar in Jerpoint Abbey in Ireland (and his helmet is an odd-looking thing too, with a clogaid-type finial in the form of a fleur-de-lys decorating its top), you can forget leg armor for that time and place. It might not have been a good thing to wear if you were always crossing the sea between one Hebridean island and another anyway...
"The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone..."
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German helms I've found are much more rounded with lower points, but also have beautiful curves. Very nicely done, though! For Lorraine, I think you're OK though, since it was an area in contact with France and Germany both. Please, share more of your work with us!
Frederick de Fulbert
Wilhelm zu Eltz-Kempenich
Cold Forge Armoury
Wilhelm zu Eltz-Kempenich
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Konstantin the Red
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D'habitude, nous disons "coif" pour "aumuse" -- c'est archaïque, peut-être? Je trouve "aumusse" dans la dictionnaire -- comme vieux vêtement de sacerdote qui s'appelle "amice," qu'est sûrement le même mot, anglicisé.
[Usually, we say "coif" for "aumuse" -- is it perhaps archaic? I find "aumuse" in the dictionary -- as an ancient priestly vestment called an "amice," surely the same word, Englished.]
[Usually, we say "coif" for "aumuse" -- is it perhaps archaic? I find "aumuse" in the dictionary -- as an ancient priestly vestment called an "amice," surely the same word, Englished.]
"The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone..."
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Konstantin the Red
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Konstantin the Red wrote:D'habitude, nous disons "coif" pour "aumuse" -- c'est archaïque, peut-être? Je trouve "aumusse" dans la dictionnaire -- comme vieux vêtement de sacerdote qui s'appelle "amice," qu'est sûrement le même mot, anglicisé.
[Usually, we say "coif" for "aumuse" -- is it perhaps archaic? I find "aumuse" in the dictionary -- as an ancient priestly vestment called an "amice," surely the same word, Englished.]
"aumuse" or "chaperon"
sorry , y speak englisch like spanish cow ..
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