After too long of a break I’ve come back to hobby of armouring. I’m working on a 16th century cuirass for theatrical stage use. However I’m having a really hard time finding internal reference photos of 16th century pauldrons, specifically where the lames are overlapping in a downward manner. I’m not specifically copying this armour but it’s a good example of what trying to imitate.
So, are the rivets on the descending lames ornamental? They don’t appear to be sliding rivets. They can’t be articulated on leathers because the plates overlap right where the rivets are…. My guess is the lames are articulated on sliding rivets in the back and leathers on the front which would make these visible rivets purely ornamental, probably added to match the visible sliding rivets on the back. But I can’t find any images of extant examples to prove this theory.

