Quote: |
"Armour was valuable, and its appearance a matter of prestige; there are many references to its being cleaned - with pumice and olive oil - and polished to a glorious shine. The author has twice been privileged to see the original surface of plate armour, in tiny sections hidden under other parts and so protected for centuries from the ferocious cleaning which has altered the surface of nearly all museum armours; it was exactly like an immensely hard modern steel mirror..." |
Gerry Embleton, 'Medieval Military Costume Recreated in Colour Photographs'
One of those armours with original surface was discovered in Madonna della Grazie church in Mantua, Italy, where it has been used on a funerary figure, covered in plaster and paint.
I have seen in various topics on forums debates about the commonality of "mirror finish", and I have seen several depictions of such finish in contemporary art. I have found several I haven't seen mentioned before, and some were mentioned in a more closed forum, so I decided I'll share them here as well.
My intention is not to somehow prove that mirror polished armour is the only correct finish. But I think the abundance of evidence in artwork shows that it was an available finish, and not only for the high end princely suits of armour.
Thumbnails, click for full sized image:
[ Linked Image ]
1435 Knights of Christ, Ghent altarpiece by Jan van Eyck
[ Linked Image ]
1435 Heilspiegel Alterpiece by Konrad Witz
[ Linked Image ]
1470 Hans Memling - Last Judgement - landscape reflecting in gilded breastplate
[ Linked Image ]
1472 Montefeltro Altarpiece by Piero della Francesca - helmet is highly polished while armour has almost satin finish
[ Linked Image ]
1475 Federico da Montefeltro by Justus of Ghent
[ Linked Image ]
1498 Judgement of Cambyses by Gerard David
[ Linked Image ]
1498 Judgement of Cambyses by Gerard David - detail
[ Linked Image ]
1499 Pietro Peruginno - Polyptych of Certosa di Pavia
[ Linked Image ]
1503 Albrecht Dürer - Side, Front, and Back View of a Helmet - it's not very obvious, but if you look closely points are reflected on the surface
[ Linked Image ]
1510 Vittore Carpaccio - Portrait of a Knight - blackened armour, but it still looks polished to high piano gloss!
[ Linked Image ]
1510 Il Sodoma - Deposition from the Cross detail - this reflection doesn't really follow the curvature of the helmet too well
[ Linked Image ]
1548 Tintoretto - The Miracle of St Mark Freeing the Slave - it's a bit dark, but armour really looks polished
[ Linked Image ]
1613 A Commander Being Armed for Battle by Peter Paul Rubens