What can I say? This is my first commissioned custom sword, and I love it. It absolutely won't be my last, though the WAF of additional swords seems to be inversely proportional to the time since the last acquisition.
I got onto Peter's waiting list shortly before he became involved with Weta working on the LoTR films and got very busy professionally but I'm very glad I always said yes when he periodically got in touch to say that he was still very busy and did I want to stay on the list! I don't regret the wait one bit, and I'm hopefully down for another one when he gets time in another few years.
I'm fortunate to know Peter and to live in the same city as him while this sword was in progress. Seeing not just progress pictures but having him come by with the in-progress sword itself -- then having him take it away again -- was a special kind of torture, but it's been a real pleasure to be able to be able to sit down and discuss little details of it's design with him. He's a very patient, receptive and educated maker who took my rough ideas and brought them to life and having that level of involvement makes handling the final object, and seeing the ideas brought into reality so well, extra special. It's also quite special that Peter was willing to deliver the sword to me technically unfinished and have me put my own leatherwork on what is very much a Peter Lyon sword but I think that's the perk of living in the same city where he can see my work and have some faith that I won't butcher the project :D
All I really knew when we started discussing the design was that I wanted a hollow-ground type XVIIIb longsword with a fishtail pommel with the sort of long graceful proportions seen in the Bayerisches sword and others of it's ilk, but without being a clone of any particular sword. This sword brings together various elements, some from other swords -- for example the fishtail pommel is based very closely on a sword from Records -- and others that just seemed like good ideas, like the shaping of the tips of the quillons, which I've never seen on another sword but which Peter has executed brilliantly.
Unfortunately the weather has been apalling since I got the sword and I don't have a big enough light box to fit the whole thing in so I don't have any pictures yet that really do it justice but here's a few I do have. The blade is deeply hollow ground with a spine 8mm thick at the cross and near 6mm up by the point but as you can see from Peter's stats above it is a light weapon that handles very well.
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Comparison with my Albion Knight. The XVIIIb is a big sword but only a few ounces heavier than the Knight.
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Here you can get some idea of the complex deeply ground lines of the pommel.
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One of the progress pictures I got from Peter at regular points while he was working on the sword. This is one of the better pictures I have available of the quillions
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This is the temporary experimental chappe / rain guard I made based on one of the finds from Dordrecht. When I've built the scabbard and can properly form the chappe to it I'll make a more ornate one. The leather is a heavy pit tanned goat, from Pergamena
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A good shot of the pommel. The bit of leather wrapped around it was a brief test of what I plan to cover the grip with. It's pit tanned goat bookbinding leather from Pergamena and it's about as good a leather for this job as you'll get for any money.