They are a truly timeless weapon, equally at home on the pages of the Maciejowski bible, the decks of a pirate ship, the trenches of WW1 Flanders, the dusty streets of modern Afghanistan, or the zombie infested suburbs of a future Earth (!).
Here's a little more info, which should hopefully inspire some of you out there to have a go for yourselves:
The wood is beech, dense and hard, with a little light spalting for added colour. I made a pair a few years ago from oak, but this time I fancied a change, and a friend of mine who knows I enjoy playing with wood let me have a stack of very nice beech he rescued from an import/export shipping company. I considered ash, as I've got some of that, but beech is a lot denser, which is what you need for a percussive weapon. I've also got some purpleheart, which would have been even heftier, but not very 'authentic'.
They are 30” long (76cm) with a straight octagonal section 2¼” square (5.5cm) extending for 12” (30cm) turning circular at the grip and tapering towards the butt.
They are each studded with 80 pyramid rosehead nails (1/2” (12mm) dia. head), every one cut down to size and blackened (the tedious part of the process). I’ve found a good source here in the UK for these large roseheads (although they are not cheap – let me know if you want their details), because the standard hand-made roseheads you find pretty readily, are great for putting together furniture, but have heads which are way too small for this application and the big penny-sizes studs are just too flat and smooth and don’t look like they have any ‘bite’!!!
The woodwork was entirely shaped by hand (not turned on a lathe) with spokeshave, scraper then sandpapered. Finished with Danish oil and hard paste wax. Overall weight is just under 3lb (1.3kg) and most of that is in the studded section. Finally, they were topped and tailed with large head hand-made nails.
They pack a mighty punch, and I would not like to be on the receiving end, even in full plate armour, and even if I’ll probably never swing one in anger (or in play) it’s reassuring to know I’ve got one handy when the floorboards creak in the night!
Julian





