I acquired a handful of Albion blades a while ago as some of you might remember from this thread here:
http://www.myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?p=194493
I was able to get started on one of these today, a Yeoman blade that is absolutely pristine thought was marked as "second" by the folks at Albion (yes, the fueller is very slightly leaning towards the right on one side...it's so subtle that I never noticed it until Owen (Bush) pointed that out to me.
I also have a sovereign with a fuller to fix, and I'm working on both hilts at the same time.
So below is the design I have in mind. You'll recognise the deltin DT2140 hilt components, inspired by the MET museum superb type XIV from the Morosini collection, for which I always had a particular fondness. The yeoman being a fairly typical type XIV, I was not surprised to see that this hilt design works very well with this blade (at least I think so :) ). That's where I want to go for the guard. I got a spare yeoman pommel from the moat during my last stay in the US...so I'll use it instead of a bronze/brass one (unless someone here has a spare engraved one, from an old deltin or windlass/factory X...in that case PM me!).
I used a rectangular thick piece of mild steel that I heated at the forge and split in two, then made a punch replicating the sword tang profile, and punch through both pieces (the sovereign and yeoman blades have exactly the same profile, save for the fueller design, so it's a lot of time saved). That was the hardest part, and I managed to miss the punch and to land the hammer on my fist instead...twice! well, that's how you learn I suppose :). I then stretched the quillons on the anvil, and started grinding the basic guard profile. Before removing too much material, I cleaned the guard slot in order to test the fit and see if the guard was well aligned at the blade shoulders...I sanded the tang a bit to fit the pommel...and that's where I am now. I realize that it doesn't look like much yet, but most of the hard stuff is done, and finishing the guard and assembly should be fairly quick from there.
Will post more after my next cession at Owen's workshop.
Cheers,
Julien


