When I received it, I could tell right away that I had made the right choice - it handles well, felt very comfortable - except I wasn't very happy with the guard. All in all in fact, the fit and finish seemed a little bit incomplete. I don't mean this to be a slight in any way against Mr. Trim -- the sword I think is meant to be a working cutter, not an exacting historical reproduction.
Anyhow, it didn't take long before I decided I was definately going to try a project with this one. I got in touch with Mike at Albion and ordered up the 'small guard blank' and the 'cocked hat pommel blank' from Albion's Moat Sale page. Using just a hacksaw, a couple files, and some sandpaper, it took two evenings to fashion and polish the guard, and two days to get the pommel shaped and polished.
Initially my plan was to utilize the pommel-nut so that my changes would not be permanent and so I could swap back and forth between my hilt and the stock one. However, as I was shaping the pommel I realized that due to the cocked-hat shape and size, this would result in basicaly the pommel-nut sticking out too far at the top and I felt it would just look bad. After some contemplation, I decided to go for broke and try doing it the 'Albion' way -- I hammered the guard on tightly then hot-peened the pommel in place. It was a bit nerve-wracking, with a torch in one hand and the ballpeen hammer in the other, pounding away at the end of my relatively brandnew sword.
Anyhow, it worked out not too badly, and after some more filing and polishing I had the peen smoothed into the pommel. The grip is an oak core, sandwich construction of course, with a cord wrap, three risers (one at either end and then one between the forefinger and middle finger). The leather is a very lightweight forest green that I got in the 'on sale' pile at Tandy. It's glued and had a tight overwrap while it dried. Finally I sealed it with a wax leather sealer, then buffed it to a dull shine.
Last step was polishing the blade to clean off some of the finger-marks etc that it incurred during all this. I used some 1000 grit then 2000 grit paper, then my recently-received grey scotchbrite pad with a bit of oil, to more or less get that satin-polish that my Albion Thegn has. At this stage, the only dissapointment I have is the grip wrap has a ragged seam that bothers me (an aesthetic issue, functionally it's not an issue). I'm going to finish this with a scabbard, that is now in the design stages.
Pretty much all this has been thanks to the great wealth of knowledge and help to be found here - the forum, the features, the reviews... couldn't have done it (wouldn't have even tried!) without myArmoury. So thanks everyone! I love my Custom Falchion even more than I loved the 'factory' design! :D
Edited to add: My changes have of course altered the specs and handling of the sword slightly:
Length Overall: 33" (was 34")
Weight: about 2 or 3 oz lighter (was 2lb 5oz)
Blade: 27" (unchanged)
Handle: 4.4" (was 4.5")
CoB: ~6" (was 4.5")
CoP: 19-20" (was 18.5")
Although the CoB has moved out a bit, this still doesn't make it too blade-heavy. It does give the blade a bit more presense but feels like a sword, not a machete.


My Custom Archangel Falchion


Closeup of the hilt - the guard is either a type 3 or a modified (shortened) type 1. The pommel is cocked-hat style. Both are blackened, which I think goes nicely with the dark forest green grip.


For reference, this is the sword with its original hilt furniture.