I told Allan I wanted an Italian or Austrian single-piece breast with fauld ca.1500--the sort of thing often depicted on lightly-armoured soldiers and militia of the period. Allan owns, knows and clearly understands The Medieval Armour from Rhodes, which is packed with information about armour of that period. He incorporated into his work for me details that I'd overlooked in my research (sliding rivets on the fauld). Looking back at TMAFR, I see what Allan already knew.
The breast arrived well-packed, with perfect fit and articulation in the fauld, good weight, properly rolled edges (even on the fauld) sliding rivets, stout straps and painted breast interior. Allan left the straps extra-long so I could trim them as needed.
The finish is excellent. As others have noted, historical finishes vary greatly. What I have here is an almost perfect surface with what I'd classify as a medium polish. There are what I guess are rotary polish marks over the whole surface, and I think that's what sometimes makes MT armour hard to photograph well. If you want to do serious living history I think you'd want to lightly finish the surface by hand with a sanding sponge or something to remove those, but very few folks will be bothered by the finish as-is.
For just under $200 I have functional, made-to-measure armour that gives me the option of leaving it as-is or doing any amount of further refinement to suit my taste, usage and collection.
I waited for many years to buy armour and decided that this is a good time for me personally, but also a good time to support a knowledgeable, skilled and generous armourer. I'm very pleased with the results. :D









