Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Fri 16 Jul, 2010 7:18 am
This is temporarily assembled with (and by) an ugly nut, but it's mostly finished. I can't decide whether I should flush-peen the tang or use a block (and if a block, plain or decorative?). Looks like the 1400-1425 swords tend to be flush-peened, with blocks being a bit later--maybe after 1450 (?). But, since this sword departs from the historical precedent in other ways I don't mind a slight anachronism. I would guess that this sword would be 1425-1450 but that's based only on what I've seen in this thread. Which method do y'all think would look best and/or be most appropriate?
I'm planning to decorate the chape with an historic design using gold paint, but I'm not married to that idea. That might be too rich a treatment for this sword.
The scabbard halves are marked, and I'm planning to make a scabbard along the lines of the one with the Vättern sword. I'm not sure about the suspension, though. There doesn't appear to be a riser near the mouth of that scabbard, and I wonder if the knot can simply be tight enough that it doesn't need that "stop" to be secure. Does anybody know if the typical fist-like knot of the later 15th c. would be appropriate here?
You builders might be interested in the construction of the chappe. This is the first of the "D" type I've made so I wasn't sure about how it should be secured. Some artwork of the period depicts the chappe without any obvious extension of the grip leather (which is typical in later periods and appears to be stitched to the chappe, which is how I make the later tubular type of chappe). I didn't want to stitch this piece but I wanted it to be secure. It doesn't fit UNDER the grip core, by the way. The base of the grip core fits INTO a cutout in the chappe (traced the base of the core and cut out that shape). I don't know if that's historically correct, but it doesn't make sense to me to insert what is essentially a leather washer between grip and cross because the leather will compress, dry and shrink over time, loosening the construction somewhat. It occurred to me that a riser just barely above the base of the grip core would press against the chappe and keep it from slipping up. In other words, the distance between the base of the core and bottom of the riser is just slightly less than the thickness of the chappe leather. I don't know if this is historically correct, but it's simple and it works.
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