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Images of late 15th/early 16th C scabbard details?
Hi all,

I have the great good fortune of having a slot soon in Brian Kunz's scabbard schedule, for not one but two Albions - an Earl and a Munich - and am looking for period examples of late 15th / early 16th C scabbard design details for inspiration.

Now, before someone says 'we have lots of threads on scabbards here', I'm after images of actual scabbards, or images in period art, that show the detail of design: tooling, risers, chapes, and so on. I've looked at many threads here, but couldn't find many images that show these details.

While we have some wonderful threads here about suspension designs, and 'rainguards'/chappes which show a lot of detail, I'm not sure we have much on scabbard design as such. (Interestingly, many of the period images we have that show great detail of 'rainguards'/chappes don't give much detail of their partnered scabbards.)

We do have some great images of messer scabbards, such as the 'messer scabbard pictures?' thread, and the Knecht thread ... these images have more detail of scabbard design than most that I've seen here for longsword scabbards.

I'm going to kick this off with some images of actual scabbards that have appeared here before, as well as the best detail I can get of Dürer's 'Knight, Death, and the Devil' ... when seen on a good print, three things are apparent:
- the longitudinal riser (as seen in other Dürer images)
- the very long chape
- and what appears to be a chevron design, with the points facing downwards ... on a good print, this very much looks to me like detailed chevrons, and not simply artistic hatching ... and is interesting, as in the two images I have of the Bayerisches scabbard, there seems to be a hint of a chevron design, with the points facing upwards ...

To me, this fairly lineal design is an interesting contrast to the more sinuous designs that Brian is fond of (and so very good at), and which are mirrored in the scabbard at the end of the row that contains the Bayerishces, below.

Anyway, to questions:
- Do you have any images that show good detail of late 15th / early 16th C scabbards - risers, tooling, chapes?
- What suggestions would you have for me/Brian for the Earl, and the Munich - and why? (At this point, I'm tempted for chevrons for the Munich, to match what appears to be the design on the Bayerisches, as well as in Dürer; and then let Brian 'have at it' with a sinuous design for the Earl, which has a similar grip and pommel to the 'other' Bayerisches sword shown at the right of the racked collection.)
- Colours: Peter Johnsson let me know that the grip and scabbard colour on the original Bayerisches was a very dark brown. Mine is now black; do we have images of black grips with brown scabbards? Alternatively, my Earl's grip is oxblood; sinuous lines seem to work best on scabbards Brian has done in various shades of brown ... do we have examples of an oxblood grip and brown scabbard in period art? Would it look odd? On the other hand, would sinous lines work on an oxblood, or black, scabbard?

Thoughts? Images? Inspirations? Suggestions?


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Dürer scabbard detail - note long chape, longitudinal riser, and chevrons
Here's the right panel of Dürer's Paumgartner Altarpiece - this one clearly shows a longitudinal riser. However, more interestingly, what can look like a 'rainguard'/chappe in most versions looks at this resolution like it could be a double-wrap of leather straps ... possibly with buckles.


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Last edited by Mark T on Thu 22 Dec, 2011 2:21 am; edited 1 time in total
This is detail from Dürer's Das Große Pferd (1505) - this one clearly shows an impressed outline of a sword shape / border that follows the line of the scabbard:


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Dürer's Die vier Windengel und die Versiegelung der Auserwählten (1497/98) also clearly shows risers. The image below loses a critical detail of the original - the longitudinal riser is shown in both swords as having a dedicated thickness. (This means there's no confusion about it instead simply being a line caused by a change in plane of the scabbard's diamond cross-section.) This detail can be more clearly seen in the reproduction in Albrecht Dürer: Waffen und Rüstungen, Heinrich Müller (Berlin, Destschen Historischen Museum, 2002).


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This scabbard in Dürer's Die Schaustellung Christi (1498) from The Great Passion, shows a longitudinal riser, clear border around edge of the scabbard face, tooling/decoration of the panels between the riser and border ... and what looks like a very, very long chape (again, see Albrecht Dürer: Waffen und Rüstungen for better detail.)


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Here's a fantastic image from Tod's sword scabbard for Toby Capwell thread. While the scabbard itself doesn't have much detail, the two notable things is that a) it's bright orange, and b) the 'rainguard'/chappe is black. This is great to see, as some other images showing chappes just have them as the same colour as the scabbard itself, but chappes of a different colour can look very distinct and striking (such as this one I had comissioned a while ago).


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Here are some others sourced from various posts here on myA, so that we have them all in the one place:


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This image suggests the scabbard faces were plain, as other items show a lot of detailed work.
I finally also just found Julien M's Ornamented scabbards - pre 16th century thread ... but that covers a longer time period, and is focussed specifically on ornamentation. I'm interested in a more limited period - late 15th to early 16th C - and scabbard design more generally: colours, chapes, chappes, risers, tooling, shapes, and so on.

Anyone have other images to add?
i have an entire book with Albrecht Durer's wood cut prints, and that man left out very little detail in his work, though his 's' and ovals look a little flat on the quillons in a lot of his work but it shows the great variety of leather work through his era.

it would take me some time to get the titles of all the works that i have in the book that reference leather work. there's easily over a hundred. the more popular wood cuts i see have already been posted.
Hi Daniel, if you get time to post some of the less-common images, I'd love to see them! :)

In the meantime, here's an effigy, reproduced from Turnbull's The book of the medieval knight (London: Arms and Armour Press, 1995):

Quote:
Monumental effigy of Lionel, Lord Welles, a Lancastrian knight who was killed at the Battle of Towton in 1461. His body was conveyed in secret to this tomb in Methley, West Yorkshire. The sculpture is very striking, showing clearly the fashionable hairstyle of the period, and is very detailed in its representation of a contemporary style of armour.


This scabbard shows a diamond-section scabbard, with clear change of plane in the faces, rather than the use of a longitudinal riser. It also has two horizontal risers in bands just below the 'rainguard' / chappe.


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Detail
alrighty Mark, it will take me a little bit of time to get them together but your in luck i don't have to be back at work until wed night. but i'll have them for you before then ;)
ok i'm back, didn't take all that long to go through the book, and some of these you may already have posted

now durer is known to have drawn from life, but there are small suttle mistakes in his work, but i'll try to describe what i see with each pic but knowing where steel and leather work is i can only speculate without color images


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the knight and the landsknecht.jpg
the knight and the landsknecht, here the knights sword seems to have a small rain guard over the quillon block

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the martydom of s cathrine.jpg
the maryterdom of s catherine. here a lot of the handel is opstructed from view but you can get an general idea of it's shape the upper portion of his grip looks like it could be wire or standard cording

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the martydom of s john.jpg
the martydom of s john. here the sword shown is quite out of the ordinary but i tend to seek out the messer on the floor with the by knives

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s johns vision of christ and the seven candel sticks.jpg
s johns vision of christ and the seven candel sticks.
i'm going to try to break up the posts so i don't loose all the images at once - what a bummer that would be


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conrad celtes handing his edition of the roswitha comedies to the emperor fredrick of saxony.jpg
conrad celtes handing his edition of the roswitha comedies to the emperor fredrick of saxony. now this is intresting, i guess at the flowering near the guillion block is a rain guard, or else just an ornate quillion block

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four angels staying the winds and singing the chosen. here the center angel has a rain guard that seems to have a curving pattern. as well as the angel in the background [ Download ]

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christ bearing the cross. this seems to be another messer with by knives [ Download ]

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the crucifixion. [ Download ]

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from lead 8 knights and soldiers [ Download ]
here are still more images i'm trying to keep them all a little and to the point with just what we're looking for


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the beheading of john the baptist.jpg
the beheading of john the bapthist. this is another rain guard that has an arching pattern

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the fall.jpg
the fall.

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the sundarium of saint veronica.jpg
the sundarium of saint veronica

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triumphal arch 1.jpg
triumphual arch 1

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triumphal arch 3.jpg
this messer image is a personal favorite

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now here is another image where durer shows he has a little trouble with showing foreshortningwith looped objects i believe the quillions on this sword would be an 's' styled pattern [ Download ]

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this one is hard to describe it looks like the rain guard is some kind of flowering pattern emerging from a primary sleeve, or it's a ring hilted sword with the leave styled rain guard [ Download ]
ok i just have two more.


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saints of austria

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coat of arms of the emperial empire and the city of nurenburg
ok Mark that's the best ones i could come up with for you, other images are so small that it's hard to tell what your looking at.

all i can stress is that durer drew from experience and things that he saw, but without the application of color some of the images are hard to tell where the guard begins and the suspension for the sword. one thing of note that i have noticed is that in some images he does show rain guards on longswords where the guard is also covering byknives. now that does seem pretty reasonable because if your guarding your primary blade from the weather why not include your byknives as well.

the risers as well i can only speculate if they are actually leather or a metal material in some of these images. due to the lack of 'cross thatching' on these depictions which would give the illusion of texture, it's a better chance that they were made of metal. others seem to be tooled leather but i find it interesting that most of the risers are depicted snugly up against the primary hand and not in the center of the handel.

we can look over the images and all give our input i know that the way i look at the work may not be exact to someone with more experience with leather work - that person may see another aspect that i'm over looking.
Hi Daniel,

Thanks so much for those - I love the diversity of 'rainguard' / chappe shapes and designs, which would all have implications for the scabbard design and construction. (I've cross-referenced this thread over at the Rainguard construction thread so that people specifically interested in chappes can get inspiration here.)

Here's the detail from Dürer's 'Ritter und Landsknecht' (1496/97), showing what appears to be a small chappe, suspension attachments high up near the throat, a longitudinal riser (or at least diamond cross-section), and the same very long chape, as seen in 'Knight, Death, and the Devil'.

So, so far for the custom scabbards that Brian at DBK is making, it sounds like longitudinal risers and very long chapes would be a good choice. We have two examples of chevron/herringbone detailing/tooling, and a few of sinuous lines, so one of each sounds like the go.

Any other period scabbard images? Any other suggestions for this commission?


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Durer Ritter und Landsknecht 1496-97 detail.jpg

Here's one more Dürer that has a bit of scabbard detail, 'Fectende Reiter' (1489) - note again the very long chape.

This one also appears to have a 'rainguard' / chappe on the hilt ... now, allowing that that part of the image is a little 'sketchy', and the piece overall may not have the same attention to detail in some of Dürer's other work, it's interesting that one of the suspension straps very close to the scabbard mouth, as we also see in some other images of the time. Given that 'tubular' chappes seem to need to seat well on a medial riser, and that they would probably pull on a suspension strap if they covered it, this raises one of the possible applications of 'flap'-constructed chappes - they'd probably fit over a throat + suspension strap more easily. Food for thought, anyway ...


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i'm really surprised with the diversity of rain guard designs. before studying durer's work i though they were simple and basic.

Brian is a great artist he's posted his work all over here, when you come up with your final design i hope you challenge him!
The recent site crash saw some images lost from this thread which helped justify its spotlight topic status! Will try to re-find and post here.

Most of these have already appeared on myA; I'm including them here for the sake of completeness.

The more detailed images I see of late 15th/early 16th C scabbards, the more I'm convinced of Sean's point that many, if not most, of the scabbards from this time are fairly plain - at least in the leather finishing. Finding images that clearly show us enough detail to show that the scabbards were plain can have some challenges, but they do exist; I'd be happy for them to be included here.


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Shows a long, thin chape

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Shows a rounded chape, which is less common on later-period scabbards. Also shows a strong medial riser, and possibly risers at the edge of the scabbard, similar to some Durer images.

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Another strong medial riser
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