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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Wed 10 Oct, 2007 4:47 pm    Post subject: Kings Armoury, and lookey what I made...         Reply with quote

Greetings,
The staff here (Nathan) was nice enough to give me the priveledge of posting information on my Parade Armour reproductions. I will try to keep this short but have quite a lot to say... I have been collecting antique arms and armour for years now. It started with swords and turned into a hairy green monster of collecting anything good I could get my hands on. I was lucky enough one day to purchase a shield at auction from the collection of the Higgins Armoury Museum. The shield turned out to be a museum copy, from designs by Etienne Delaune made for King Henry II 1555. I polished it up and was blown away at the detail and workmanship of this fine shield. At that point I was hooked. I gave up collecting swords for the time being and focused my time and money on aquiring Ornate Armour from around the world.
To date there are over a dozen pieces of Antique Museum quality Parade Armour in my collection.
I realized I could not possibly be the only one with lust for embossed iron, and decided to go about reproducing them in small numbers.
I started talking to foundries, sand foundries, lost wax foundries, ceramic cast aluminum foundries... To make a long story short, sand looks terrible, lost wax costs $1000 a foot, and making a ceramic or any permanant mold of size costs as much as a car. I was told more times than I can count, "Go To China" I really wanted them to be made in the USA or Europe.
They needed to be light so they could be carried at events, parades, SCA.

In the end I made them myself. They are true reproductions with no loss of detail, as they are formed atom by atom in solid copper and nickel silver. I know everyone will want to know specifics and I am not ready to give all my secrets away just yet. I should make it clear that this armour is not made to be hit with a weapon. I cant imagine why someone would want to do that, but ya never know. I make them quite thick, 5 pounds of 99.9 pure copper goes into the small shield. If hit hard it will dent and that would be a crying shame. I did plan to experiment with re-inactor (Battle Ready) versions but decided it was rediculous and am not ready to dodge lightning from the Gods.

I am still working on a website and pricing details. I plan to reproduce up to 500 of each piece over the next decade. Each shield, helmet, piece of armour take 100s of hours to complete. All shaping, finishing, polishing is done by hand.
I am looking for honest feedback from the members here, well whatya think?
P.S, sorry for not having better photo backdrops, they do look much better if you save and zoom them.



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Picture 196.jpg
More war in Heaven
Léonard Morel-Ladeuil 1866


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HenryII2.jpg
Made for the King of France...
Etienne Delaune first worked under King Henry II and produced many designs for the decorative art in France. In 1546, he worked as a goldsmith in Paris and became the king’s chief medallist in 1552.


 Attachment: 51.21 KB
HenryII.jpg
Made for the King of France...
Etienne Delaune first worked under King Henry II and produced many designs for the decorative art in France. In 1546, he worked as a goldsmith in Paris and became the king’s chief medallist in 1552.


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HenryII1.jpg
Who called the cavalry?
Etienne Delaune first worked under King Henry II and produced many designs for the decorative art in France. In 1546, he worked as a goldsmith in Paris and became the king’s chief medallist in 1552.


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HenryII3.jpg
Its good to be the king
Etienne Delaune first worked under King Henry II and produced many designs for the decorative art in France. In 1546, he worked as a goldsmith in Paris and became the king’s chief medallist in 1552.


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War in Heaven1.jpg
Paradise Lost!
Léonard Morel-Ladeuil 1866


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War in heaven.jpg
Milton or Paradise Lost
Léonard Morel-Ladeuil 1866



Last edited by Sam Haverkamp on Sat 13 Oct, 2007 10:22 pm; edited 12 times in total
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Justin H. Núñez




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PostPosted: Wed 10 Oct, 2007 6:19 pm    Post subject: amazing         Reply with quote

Sam,
The detail on those shields is simply amazing. True works of art! I bet if you were to patina them you couldn't tell the difference from the originals. I am anxious to see what else you can do, which I imagine is probably just about anything, I better get busy and save up money.

"Nothing in fencing is really difficult, it just takes work." - Aldo Nadi
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Wed 10 Oct, 2007 6:38 pm    Post subject: Re: amazing         Reply with quote

Justin H. Núñez wrote:
Sam,
The detail on those shields is simply amazing. True works of art! I bet if you were to patina them you couldn't tell the difference from the originals. I am anxious to see what else you can do, which I imagine is probably just about anything, I better get busy and save up money.


Thanks for the kind words Justin. I am an Armour FREAK, and really need anything I make be of the best possible quality.
I will offer choice of patina. The #1s you see here are a light Black and White (Light blackening and high polish)
They look quite good really black with just slight highlights or can be left bright copper (see picture) and blackened if one wishes that type of finish. There is also the option of Gold Plating if one wanted that sort of thing. Wouldnt want to stand in front of one in the bright sun...
Bottom line is I would love to expieriment with different finishes.



 Attachment: 49.62 KB
HenryII au Natural.jpg
No nickel silver or patina.
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Jean Thibodeau




PostPosted: Wed 10 Oct, 2007 8:40 pm    Post subject: Re: Kings Armoury, and lookey what I made...         Reply with quote

Sam Haverkamp wrote:
I should make it clear that this armour is not made to be hit with a weapon. I cant imagine why someone would want to do that, but ya never know. I make them quite thick, 5 pounds of 99.9 pure copper goes into the small shield. If hit hard it will dent and that would be a crying shame. I did plan to experiment with re-inactor (Battle Ready) versions but decided it was rediculous and am not ready to dodge lightning from the Gods.


What is surprising I think about very ornamental period armour is that many where used for serious fighting or at least worn by the very rich and powerful in battle were the risk of having to fight in the armour would have been a possibility: So much of the highly decorated stuff would still be " generally " useable in an emergency to a degree as the embossing could weaken the armour due to the extreme embossing and these could also catch the point of a weapon in contrast to more practical deflecting surfaces.

Some " extreme pieces " were probably intended exclusively for display though. ( I think ? )

As to why anyone today would want to use this kind of armour in real reenactment fighting or jousting it is a very valid statement. Costume only use for living history is a possibility so wearable armour if plate armour or helmets are also to be made by you would be something to consider i.e. semi-useability then.

But there is at least one maker of very fine armour who also participates in jousts wearing his armour ! Eek! Laughing Out Loud
Highly decorated blued and gilded armour but not the embossed sculptural armour like you have shown.
( I don't remember the Topic thread but there was one showing this armour here on myArmoury ).

Very nice work by the way. Big Grin Cool

You can easily give up your freedom. You have to fight hard to get it back!
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 8:16 am    Post subject: Re: Kings Armoury, and lookey what I made...         Reply with quote

Jean Thibodeau Wrote
What is surprising I think about very ornamental period armour is that many where used for serious fighting or at least worn by the very rich and powerful in battle were the risk of having to fight in the armour would have been a possibility: So much of the highly decorated stuff would still be " generally " useable in an emergency to a degree as the embossing could weaken the armour due to the extreme embossing and these could also catch the point of a weapon in contrast to more practical deflecting surfaces.


Thanks for the comments Jean,
It is true the rich commissioned very detailed and embossed harnesses. They may have even fought in them at tournaments or when challenged and happened to be wearing their best suit. Most of the pieces we will be reproducing were specifically made for royalty to be worn at court and parade. The pieces took years to complete and cost hundreds of thousands of todays dollars to fund. I could make them battle ready but is that the responsible thing to do? As is they are very strong and can take a blow, but will be damaged, dented. The other option would be to cast them from Iron, but then they are so heavy they could not carried comfortably and the loss of detail would be substancial. I cant get the visual out of my mind of some young man having cutting practice on a piece of reproduced armour made for the King of France over 4 centuries ago. I dunno, maybe people want that sort of thing and I am just being sentimental.
Sam


Last edited by Sam Haverkamp on Thu 11 Oct, 2007 9:30 am; edited 1 time in total
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 8:39 am    Post subject: Milton Shield         Reply with quote

I received a question offline about the Milton. It is not a period shield. That said, it is in my opinion the finest repousse work in history. It won a gold medal at the Paris Exhibition and was touted as the best work that could be done. It is also the most difficult piece to reproduce. I saw this as a challenge and decided to make this the first reproduction.
Sam


Last edited by Sam Haverkamp on Fri 12 Oct, 2007 10:05 am; edited 1 time in total
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Jean Thibodeau




PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 11:45 am    Post subject: Re: Kings Armoury, and lookey what I made...         Reply with quote

Sam Haverkamp wrote:
Most of the pieces we will be reproducing were specifically made for royalty to be worn at court and parade. The pieces took years to complete and cost hundreds of thousands of todays dollars to fund. I could make them battle ready but is that the responsible thing to do? As is they are very strong and can take a blow, but will be damaged, dented. The other option would be to cast them from Iron, but then they are so heavy they could not carried comfortably and the loss of detail would be substancial. I cant get the visual out of my mind of some young man having cutting practice on a piece of reproduced armour made for the King of France over 4 centuries ago. I dunno, maybe people want that sort of thing and I am just being sentimental.
Sam


Marketed and sold as parade and court armour, that is not meant to be, " fighting armour " is perfectly fine if it's clear to the buyer, and you seem to be making every effort to make it clear.

When the armour is reproducing parade armour that was never meant for serious use in period then it is 100% faithful to the originals if it also not meant for use as armour.

If the armour was also meant for use in period it should be made for use, or rather " theoretical use ", to be 100% true to the originals. Some clients want functional armour or swords even if they never would risk damaging a very ornate and expensive piece: It's just part of having a closest to possible reproduction of a period piece as it would have looked when new.

Although I'm not sure that " cast iron " was ever used for functional armour as it would be too heavy or brittle to make good plate armour: Mild steel or higher carbon steel sheets would have been hammered into shape and possibly heat treated if the armour was for use. The additional skill needed to do the repousé work and keep the functional aspect at a high level of quality is a whole different level of expertise in period or in a modern copy.

But these are side issues I drifted into for the sake of discussing alternate mindsets about what armour should be. To get back to your goals I think you want to see what the demand would be for these art pieces as wearable parade armour.

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Garrett L. Hammonds




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PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 7:00 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

wow, but im pretty sure i would never let some one hit that with a sword or a lance lol
FOR KING AND COUNTRY
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 7:28 pm    Post subject: My dilema         Reply with quote

Jean,
All very good points. When I spoke of Cast Iron, It was in the context of what options are possible to create a quality reproduction that can at least be carried outside if you felt like it, and is made of metal. The kind of detail required to get a piece like this right, dictates the options (Very Few) to reproduce it. I do know by calling something Armour dictates that it is for protection and should be functional. Even the parade armour of the period was made from iron plate, probably hardened. It is not possible with conventional means to create a reproduction using this material and be in any way affordable to most people. The process used creates a near perfect copy and material, time is very expensive. Has anyone seen the price of metal lately?
So thats my dilemma.... Should It not be called Armour? Should it be called medieval Art?
I think by its nature its still Armour! You would be more protected using one of these than an African Wicker shield Big Grin
Sam
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Jean Thibodeau




PostPosted: Thu 11 Oct, 2007 10:09 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

I completely agree that making armour this ornate also as functional as possible would mean it costing something in the 5 figures and might be almost impossible to do today using period methods and skills. Only a handful or armourer/artists could have managed it in period after years of apprenticeship to the very best armourers.

So, yes the focus should be " Art " first and wearability second, with actual use being not an issue i.e. the shapes being right and the material solid.

Compromises for technical and economical reasons maybe ? But the point of these is mostly the beauty of the low relief sculptural " HIGH ART " : A bit like getting a top quality copy of a major classical painting as close to the original in as fine detail as possible.

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Sean Flynt




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PostPosted: Fri 12 Oct, 2007 9:00 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Some of the "finest" helmets in museum collections were never intended for the field. Deep embossing and chasing a la the Negrolis thins the steel to a degree unsuitable for combat. These were displays of wealth and power. If the Met, et al. still call that armour, I think you can call your fine work armour as well. It's perfectly historical (for the 16th c. at least) to make armour never intended to be used in combat (and in fact unsuitable for such use).
-Sean

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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Fri 12 Oct, 2007 11:11 am    Post subject: Parade armour/art         Reply with quote

Sean,
I do agree but see Jeans point as well. I think its appropriate to call it "Parade Armour" as there are many examples called by this name that are in no way combat ready as you so astutely pointed out. Karl of Germany has some of the best links to Ornate/Parade Armour around. This particular example is made from copper. Looks kinda wacky to me, but royalty has its quirks.

http://www.karlofgermany.com/master21.htm

My point is, that as long as its made from metal, and every attemp has been made to recreate the size, shape, thickness and detail of the piece, it can be called Parade Armour.
I have some crazy daydreams some days. I do fight SCA and love the plain functional Armour needed to protect the family jewels and all, but have pictured Royalty at court wearing Ornate Armour and carrying shields of my reproductions.
Maybe I am crazy to think that if I put proper handles on the shields that people will take them out to events, show them at court. I do plan to reproduce a Negroli Cuirass (See Picture) Is it possible that someone would want to wear it at event if I make it wearable?
Am I crazy?



 Attachment: 43.63 KB
Itailian Embossed Armor.jpg
Reproduction of Italian Grotesque Cuirass, Giovanni Paolo NEGROLI (This is the real deal and was made from the original. Thought to be the only copy on record. The original is in the Louvre and the back plate is lost or missing.
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Fri 12 Oct, 2007 5:05 pm    Post subject: Heater         Reply with quote

This may be a better picture of the Henry II piece


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Picture 1912.JPG

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Hugo Voisine




PostPosted: Sat 13 Oct, 2007 10:24 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Very impressive stuff Sam ! I don't think I have ever seen anything like the reproduction you have made... I can't imagine how much work you did to achieve this... must have been a lot of trials and errors... but the final result is really sublime.

A wearable version of those shields would be very nice for people attending fares or for use as high quality theatrical props... like the weapons supplied by Arms & Armor to the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.

« Que dites-vous ?... C'est inutile ?... Je le sais !
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R D Moore




PostPosted: Sat 13 Oct, 2007 5:16 pm    Post subject: Re: Parade armour/art         Reply with quote

Am I crazy?[/quote]

No. You create for a different market. Mercedes builds a 4 x 4 SUV that I wouldn't mind owning but I wouldn't take it Deer hunting.

"No man is entitled to the blessings of freedom unless he be vigilant in its preservation" ...Gen. Douglas Macarthur
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Tue 16 Oct, 2007 10:19 am    Post subject: Trial and error         Reply with quote

Hugo,
Thanks for your comments. There has been a lot of trials by fire and many errors to get to this point. I cant even calculate the time and money spent so far. My wife has been pretty great through all of it ,and although cautious she did not shoot me down even when it wasn't going so well. It helps that I am absolutely nuts over the art ,and the attention to detail the artists showed so very long ago is inspiring. I could not bring myself to give up knowing I am only reproducing these amazing examples and think of how much work it would have been to spend 3 years making a single shield.
It is to the point now that I must sell some pieces and re-invest in the project to produce additional pieces.
Great tip about theatre props. I know they use quite a bit of latex and plastic reproductions in Movies/Theatre, and I am always blown away when when they show the making of these productions and show close ups of the rubber armour.
Maybe there is a market there for more accurate reproductions...
I do hope to have a website up and running in the next couple months.
Sam
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Sam Haverkamp
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PostPosted: Wed 24 Oct, 2007 12:09 pm    Post subject: Henry II         Reply with quote

Greetings,
I am really excited about a new addition to our family of pieces from designs by Etienne Delaune. I have been searching for 3 years for a museum copy of the Henry II shield in the Met. (Museum copies were made before the invent of photography as a way to share the Art and design with archeologists and other museums).
I was beginning to think it was never reproduced!
The battle scene in the center depicts the victory of Hannibal, and the Carthaginians over the Romans at Cannae in 216 B.C.
I expect to struggle with the gold inlay throughout the strapwork borders, but will try to make the best reproduction that can be done.
It may take several months to get a piece finished. At that time I will post updates
Sam



 Attachment: 72.12 KB
pic_shield29.jpg
Original currently in the Metropolitan Museum.
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Allen Foster




PostPosted: Tue 16 Jun, 2009 7:04 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

I thought I would bump this because I love Sam Haverkamp's work and because I want one of his shields so Badddd!

I just had to look up this post again to salivate.


Allen

"Rise up, O Lord, and may thy enemies be dispersed and those who hate thee be driven from thy face."
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M. Eversberg II




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PostPosted: Wed 17 Jun, 2009 12:28 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Somehow, I missed this topic. Somehow, it's not pages upon pages long!

M.

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