I have been lurking on these forums for a while and inspired by Todd Owe's post I have decided to brave posting, for your comment, some images of various pieces I have made.
I live in Sydney Australia and first became interested in making swords and armor in the late '80s when I spent a weekend assisting one of Australia's founding medievalists, Peter Lee. After a few trials making daggers and the odd scrap of chain mail, my interest slid to the back burner indefinitely. Recently however, my son, now eight, developed his own interest in things vaguely medieval (D&D, Warhammer etc.) and his interest has inspired me to get back into it .
The first piece I made was a mail shirt and coif sized to fit my son. Though with a weight of 5.4Kg (11.9lbs) for the shirt and 1.7kgs (3.7lbs) for the coif, he never wears it for long. The little helmet in the picture is another 1kg (2.2lbs). The shirt is made fro 2mm fencing wire and the coif from 1.6mm fencing wire.
The Crossbow is also a fraction undersized and is made with a rigid prod for safety (and where I live, legality). The 'string' is elastic enabling it to fire up to about 20 feet.
The shield (still a work in progress) is again designed for my son being made out of ply only 7mm thick for weight reasons. The boss is 18-gauge steel.
Of the various swords I have attempted the two pictured are probably the better efforts. Both are made from mild steel, which started life as galvanized lintels (easy to obtain from the hardware store). The shorter of the two (Oakeshott type XIV theoretically) has a 65cm (26") blade and a grip for which I am entirely indebted to Sean Flint and his article on redressing his English Estoc.
The other has an 80cm (31") blade and is, as you can see a work in progress.
Forgive, if you will the wavering of the blades as all my tools are of the hand held variety.
Also a work in progress is the Great Helm made from 16-gauge steel and much harder work than it looks.
Thanks for your indulgence.
Nick.


Chain Mail


Crossbow


Great Helm


Round Shield


Type XIV 1


Type XIV 2


Type XII 1


Type XII 2