| myArmoury.com is now completely member-supported. Please contribute to our efforts with a donation. Your donations will go towards updating our site, modernizing it, and keeping it viable long-term. Last 10 Donors: Anonymous, Daniel Sullivan, Chad Arnow, Jonathan Dean, M. Oroszlany, Sam Arwas, Barry C. Hutchins, Dan Kary, Oskar Gessler, Dave Tonge (View All Donors) |
Author |
Message |
Leo Todeschini
Industry Professional
|
Posted: Wed 28 Sep, 2016 11:55 am Post subject: Landsknecht tri-lobe dagger repro |
|
|
Hi All,
I have been wanting make this dagger for a decade and luckily a customer decided it was his time to own one and so this was born and I hope you like it. Of course any questions or comments, please fire away.
This dagger is strongly based on one in the Wallace Collection and there are many similar daggers.
The Landsknechts loved these ostentatious daggers and the very 'funnel' shaped grips.
The dagger handle is covered in leather with three steel rods and fabricated cap and guard. The blade is double edged and is around 25cm long with an inlaid makers mark.
The scabbard is made from a lime core, covered in leather and fitted with fabricated steel fittings and two suspension points on the rear.
Regards
Tod
Attachment: 193.76 KB
Attachment: 152.93 KB
Attachment: 143.05 KB
Attachment: 175.86 KB
Attachment: 159.06 KB
Attachment: 145.36 KB
Attachment: 154.12 KB
Attachment: 189.42 KB
Attachment: 182.81 KB
Attachment: 115.92 KB
www.todsworkshop.com
www.todcutler.com
www.instagram.com/todsworkshop
https://www.facebook.com/TodsWorkshop
www.youtube.com/user/todsstuff1
|
|
|
|
Nathan Robinson
myArmoury Admin
|
|
|
|
Julien M
|
Posted: Wed 28 Sep, 2016 1:58 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Great work as usual Tod. As it often happens with your repro, I actually prefer yours to the original!
Cheers,
J
|
|
|
|
Sean Flynt
|
|
|
|
Alex Indman
|
Posted: Thu 06 Oct, 2016 10:29 am Post subject: |
|
|
Wow, this is impressive!
I can imagine how tricky it must have been soldering multiple sections of those scabbard fittings together (after doing a much simpler version myself as a hobby project, a couple years ago)...
Have you considered blackening/bluing all the steel parts in some way? It seems to have been pretty common for the originals. I would expect plain polished steel to start picking up stains and rust in no time under any kind of field use.
Also curious about the "suspension points". They look like basically short lengths of a tube, right? I guess intended to pass a cord through them, which will then be tied to the belt?
On one similar scabbard I have seen from the back, there were just two square belt loops, perpendicular to scabbard. And looks like exactly same setup shows up in the pictures of the original posted here by Julien.
Alex.
|
|
|
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum You cannot attach files in this forum You can download files in this forum
|
All contents © Copyright 2003-2024 myArmoury.com All rights reserved
Discussion forums powered by phpBB © The phpBB Group
Switch to the Basic Low-bandwidth Version of the forum
|