Posts: 3 Location: Croatia
Thu 17 Sep, 2009 4:38 pm
Japanese armour strapping
This is my first post and I'd like to say hi to everyone. :)
What interests me is the construction of the strapping system used in Japanese armour.
How did they attach the laces that hold cuirass and the shoulder straps together without making any ugly knots ?
(unless the knots were on the inside, but that would probably be uncomfortable considering the laces are so thick)
Thank you in advance.
Attachment: 119.32 KB

Posts: 11,553 Location: San Francisco
Thu 17 Sep, 2009 4:40 pm
Hi, unfortunately I don't have anything to add, but I wanted to comment that I recently went to the
Lords of the Samurai exhibit at the
San Francisco Asian Art Museum. The exact details that you're asking about stood out to me, too, and intrigued me more than any other thing I saw!
Posts: 1,504 Location: Brisbane, Australia
Fri 18 Sep, 2009 4:10 am
There are the 4 holes where the laces connect to the front plate. Each lace goes through the top hole on its side, and then comes back out the bottom hole. On your photo, it looks like the ends are then tucked in the other bottom hole. This doesn't look very secure to me.
What I have seen on other armours is that in this part, where the laces go from one bottom hole to the other, it looks as if the lace has been unbraided, and then both laces rebraided together. That is, the lace between the two bottom holes is a double-thickness braid, a splicing of the two ends together. This was almost certainly replacement lacing, rather than original. In your photo, this hasn't been done - you can see the two side-by-side between the holes.
I don't imagine that the ends would be knotted on the inside. If you wanted to knot them, you'd knot them in some kind of fancy decorative knot on the outside. I've seen photos where there are a pair of decorative knots further down, with the knotted laces looking the same as the shoulder laces. If they're the same laces, they'd run about 10-15 cm or so along the inside before re-emerging to be knotted.
EDIT: Saw a photo where the cords coming out of the bottom holes appeared to be tied in a knot. A neat, compact knot.
You
cannot post new topics in this forum
You
cannot reply to topics in this forum
You
cannot edit your posts in this forum
You
cannot delete your posts in this forum
You
cannot vote in polls in this forum
You
cannot attach files in this forum
You
can download files in this forum