I so so wanted to call this post « polishing my helmet » but after the fallout from « check out my junk » (on the old blog) I didn’t dare.
Now then…one of the only downsides to zoom gaming, (of which I have been doing more of my fair share of late) is that people get to see the kind of crack den / sex dungeon / doom preppers bunker that you regularly inhabit. Last night I realised that my regular background view might require a bit of further explanation if I’m ever to get another invite to a game.
The longest serving of the cognoscenti may recall that I used to style myself a method wargamer, someone who wanted to know what it was like to wear the kit and use the weapons that my miniature chaps are forced to wield. It was this mind set that led me into re enactment and which allowed me to accumulate quite a hoard of medieval and ECW kit - until my first move to France saw the majority of it getting sold off.
On this my second (and final) sojourn to la belle France I’ve been lucky enough to have a dedicated games room, but it was looking a bit devoid of character until a chance encounter with an Adrian helmet at a local brocante got me thinking about tarting my new space up with something other than a bit of emulsion and the odd family photo.
Spurred on by the impulse purchase of this French military icon, the initial concept was just a display of a few more helmets but it soon morphed into helmet types and equipment that I’d worn and used in the past. Since, as I said, most of my original gear is now long gone, I started looking at the websites of people who make museum grade replicas replacements.
And just like that my wallet emptied.
Now I’d be the first to admit that having weapons on the wall is a tad…I dont know…vulgar? But I’m justifying this collection as literally a personal history trail so hopefully folk won’t feel the need be too judgy. Rest assured there will be no machine guns or nazi memorabilia here…no sireee Bob. (Especially after my “tussle” with an SS Feldpolizei reenactor at the Kent military show ground in 2013 - story for another day I’m afraid). ((Mutters under breath..Man I hate wannabe nazi’s…))
My new collection will be small and limited to my main areas of interest, i.e. ECW and early to late medieval and, unlike the blunted weapons I used when teaching people how to kill each other at RegIa Anglorum, this time they can and will be fully functional.
Philosophical question. Is reenacting or war gaming military conflicts from beyond living memory more palatable? Is anyone doing Ukraine / Russia yet? And if they were how would you feel about it? Discuss.
Okay back on topic.
Helmets.
Here’s a piccie of the Adrian helmet that started the whole thing.
The Adrian style helmet is a design classic in my eyes and although they can be quite commonly found in junk shops etc over here they seem to suffer from Volkswagen badge disease. On the front of the helmet is meant to be a device showing the arm of service to which the helmet was issued but almost every time you find an Adrian helmet here the damned badge thingy is missing.
This particular one was issued to the Chasseurs Pied chaps (hence the hunting horn badge) and is an M15 version made from three pieces with a single large vent hole under the crest. There’s still faint traces of blue grey paint in places and given its 1915 production date it most likely saw service in WW1.
So that was the trigger for this particular spending spree, but it was only the inspiration and not actually linked with anything I’ve either gamed or re enacted.
Let’s get on to to my personal history trail.
First up is a Spangenhelm. Worn pretty much across Europe and the British Isles between the eighth and 11th centuries, it’s made up of four metal plates, cross ribs and a brow band with a nasal. It’s pretty much a direct descendant of earlier forms like late Roman cavalry helmets but without the cheek guards. Some examples have an aventail and back in the day I owned several of them, one of which sported said aventail cos it somehow looked more war like. (Yeah. I know, right).
I used to train folks to fight with sword, axe and spear and sure the sword and the axe look more sexy, but, just like the less glamorous artillery of WW1…the spear is definitely the main killer on the early medieval battlefield.
With that in mind here is a winged spear originally designed for boar hunting (the wings prevent an injured boar from dragging its way up the shaft to get at you and also prevents too deep a penetration (potentially getting the weapon stuck in the target).
The wings in combat are ideal for hooking over the rim of an enemy shield and dragging it away from the holders body. If you work in two person spear teams in a shield wall your mate on the left can wait for you to hook a shield and pull it away from the opponents body then he can stab his spear into the gap you’ve created and… erm… slot him…as modern soldiers apparently say. * Attacking on the diagonal like this is a common tactic in re enactment and I’ve often wondered if that’s why chess pawns are depicted attacking that way too?
The one below is a 2m long two handed spear and you use it with your shield slung on your back (or on its strap across your left front / shoulder).
Swords. I’m still waiting on the Copper Gate helmet reproduction to go with this magnificent 7th century sword. It’s a copy of the Fetter Lane sword found in London in 1893. It’s posher than the one I used in RegIa but hey it was a 60th birthday treat so what the hell. And yes… it’s sharp. The hilt is really fancy and the blade is a very nice patterned Damascus steel but this isn’t a very good picture unfortunately. Point of balance is around 5 inches along the blade which makes it a pretty hefty piece for chopping with.
The Current Mrs Broom - who’s ace at needlework etc… hell she’s just ace - did me two faux Bayeux Tapestry pictures for my walls as well. One is taken directly from the tapestry but has Harold holding a spear rather than plucking an arrow from his eye (see the whole « was the tapestry altered » theory) and the other being the work of Stew (sadly not blogging at the mo) which makes me laugh every time I see it.
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Here’s a slightly better picture of the sword, (in the wrong place of course thanks to blogger) courtesy of the blokes “what made it”. |
Next up, here’s a Sallet helmet circa 1470. I had two goes with my original of this at the yearly Tewkesbury battle re enactment. I was only a grunt and actually a guest of one of the societies staging the event. (I borrowed most of my kit for this). I wanted to join the group but the cost of yet more equipment, fees, and of course the time meant that I never got fully into it.
And the item underneath the spear was what I was wielding at Tewkesbury - well a blunt version at any rate. It’s an English Bill, a close cousin of the Halberd if you were wondering.
I reckon I should be sorted come the zombie apocalypse. Lol.
Then there’s Meg my matchlock musket - last fired in 2016 and probably never going to be fired again…which is sad. Glad I never sold it cos I think it looks okay up on the wall, instead of locked in a gun safe as it was in the UK. I never used the apostles since my re enactment regiment (Sir William Pennymans Regiment of Foote) was a royalist one that upon re equipping in Oxford was issued paper cartridges in a leather bag (due to equipment shortages) in 1642 / 1643.
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Roaring Meg - roars no more. |
I think that’s probably enough militaria for one day. Might do another post on new additions as and when they arrive.
Final thought. We only get to play at war with our toy soldiers. No one gets hurt (unless you mishandle wire spears…lol.) In reality it takes a brave man to stand against maniacs waving real weapons at you, so don’t be too hard on your chaps when they next fail a morale check. How brave would you be?
Toodleooh.
*Remind me to tell you sometime about the day I cut half of a blokes ear off and lost a tooth to a blunted axe in the mouth by way of compensation. True story.
*Disclaimer* (I am aware that my never ending supply of wild stories can sound a bit like, BS, but honestly when it comes to life I seem to have the reverse Midas touch. Shit just seems to happen to me). The only saving grace is that given the passage of time even the worst happenings can seem quite amusing, and that’s something to cling on to in this crazy upside down world. N’est - ce pas?
Frankly I'm rather jealous of all of this stuff Mark! I have pondered on getting a few items, but the absence of a dedicated games space means that anything I do get in the future will have to be rather small, such as the wonderful tapestry items made by your good wife (Stu's inspired one is brilliant and I'm sure there would be a market for them!).
ReplyDeleteAs for gaming modern conflicts, I have seen the current Ukraine war having stuff modelled for it and IIRC someone mentioned a game being played out as well, but can't remember where I read it. I will happily play a fictional Cold War game circa 1985, but that's it for post war as it is not a 'period' that really grabs me.
As for how brave would I be? Well when I lived in Nigeria there was something known as the Zango Kataf riot that spread to the city I lived in (circa 3,000 people killed and that's just the bodies they found). The tribe on the receiving end of the violence formed a large part of the workforce in the compound where I lived. We fully expected to be attacked that night and so made up improvised weapons from the woodworking tools we had to hand, so chisels tied to poles to make spears, hammers etc. We would have literally fought to the death, as it would have simply been a case of their lives or ours. Thankfully it passed our street by but not far away there was 'trouble'.
Bloody hell Steve that sounds really scary. Sounds like you were completely out of options as far as doing a runner was concerned. Still bloody brave of you though mate. Kudos.
DeleteI don't think we were brave, we simply had no other option but to stay and fight. Having about 4-5 others in my bungalow helped all of our morale, that's for sure and I don't suppose I felt scared, with ignorance being bliss and all that as it's not the sort of thing you encounter growing up in a rural village!
DeleteNigeria's a scary place and has been that way for a long time. Back in the 80's my father was working the oil fields out there and on a trip between facilities found himself held up at gunpoint by bandits and kidnapped. He and the other white members of the party were set free the next day for fear of retribution, but he said they poor locals of their party "disappeared". :/
DeleteI always enjoy your wild tales and am still waiting for the book, "My Life In France" or "A Limey in Limousin". I think you could give Mark Twain a run.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing close-ups of your arms and armor collection. Roaring Meg looks like real beast. The swine feather must be needed to simply support its weight when firing. That is very impressive needlework too!
Mark Toise would be the appropriate pen name.
DeleteChris/Nundanket
Now now! Lol.
DeleteThank you Jon, I felt it incumbent on me after last nights game to try to convince you and the other players that weaponry and helmets etc in your room are all perfectly normal. As for the book…you may be waiting a good long time for that. I think the blog will have to suffice instead.
DeleteI thought ‘toise’ was a pre-metric unit of measurement (about 6 feet). Or does it have more pejorative connotations in modern France?
DeleteIn the event and to the extent that it does, I wholly and unreservedly apologise for any offence caused, such offence, for the avoidance of doubt, being entirely unintentional blah blah blah please don’t stab me with your hog spear 🙏
Chris
And there’s me thinking you’d misspelled “tois”. Way too clever for me. You can consider the inappropriately sounding hog spear to be duly lowered, lol. :-)
DeleteJB, the Current Mrs Broom is a dab hand at the old tapestry - a lot of work in there. Weapons! I like them, but even though over here the Current Mrs Wargamer is relaxed about everything, the one thing she doesn’t like is knives etc laying around, as she is convinced we will be burgled and killed in our beds! So I will just enjoy them via your walls.
ReplyDeleteAs for wargaming near period conflicts, it’s not for me, though that is not a judgemental thing towards others, as I know a goodly number of servicemen and recent retirees will game current and near current conflicts.
I know there then becomes potential arguments as to what is different between now and 400 years ago, but I have never felt a need to explain myself on such matters concerning toy soldiers :-)
Yeah she is a dab hand isn’t she. Not sure what she’s still doing with an old duffer like me, lol. As to the modern conflict thing - I can’t really explain it myself really but I suspect it’s that it just feels wrong to be making a game out of something in which people are still dying every day.
DeleteA well-furnished gaming room!
ReplyDeleteThanks matey, I’m getting there slowly.
DeleteLike Steve, I’m jealous! I’m also not going to argue with you ever 😂
ReplyDeleteChris/Nundanket
You’re quite safe matey, the only people I could possibly do harm to are politicians.
DeleteI'm a big fan of historical memorabilia in gaming spaces/studies and I feel they add to the atmosphere of the area and the events held within.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of visits to my Grandfather's study which always enthralled a young Dai up until the man shuffled off his mortal coil. I am now the proud recipient of his 18th Century naval cutlass, 20th Century British Army ceremonial sword (Parade ground type thing), a Kris he received after he left his Naval posting in Singapore in the early 60's and a flippin' long and evil looking bayonet from the Great War that my stepfather gave me - French or Belgian I believe. One day they'll all grace the wall-space of my own gaming room - at least that's the plan.
I am envious of your own collection and it's great that it's all been used in one form or another. Adrian helmets are so classic and used by so many nations at one time or another as well. The only one I've been lucky enough to check out didn't fit my big noggin, not even close. People really were smaller back in the day.
I'm not at all bothered about people gaming modern periods - I don't game them purely because they don't really hold that much interest to me. This hobby is a form of entertainment though, and much like beauty I feel an "in the eye of the beholder" type quote applies here too.
Much like you, should the zombies rise, I feel I will be in a good place. And that's not even counting my small firearms collection.
Great post sir!
Thanks Dai - sounds like you’ve got an interesting collection of your own which would be cool to see one of the days. They also have the added magic ingredient of originality and a deeper connection with a relative, which is something money just can’t buy. Very nice.
DeleteWell where do we start with this little lot! First the militaria - envious to say the least. After converting the Wargames room in the garage to a gym and retreating to the gaming loft I haven’t quite got the space to display such items but I wish! I did do a bit of dark age re-enactment many, many moons ago. Hell the fight between the Northern Groups Co-ordinated by Karl Eagle 😳 even got a slot on the BBC’s Pebble Mill at 1! It does give an insight for sure.
ReplyDeleteSo part of Pennyman’s regiment eh? I live a couple of hundred yards from his estate home (Marske Hall) and frequently look out from part of the old village where the people from his estate repulsed a Parliamentarian landing from their ship ( the Rainbow)!
Second World War is about my limit in terms of gaming although I do have some Cold War vehicles etc but they’re for a totally fictitious campaign with fictitious nations etc. Having worked with men and women who fought in the Falklands campaign I always felt uncomfortable seeing fellow gamers play the war within a year or so of it finishing.
What a lucky man to have such a talented wife, love the tapestries - there’s a market there for sure.
So the gaming room is certainly going to be a most excellent venue. Time to put some period tents in the garden and invite some gamers to attend for a truly excellent gaming experience.
No need to feel jealous at all Graham, I’ve spent most of my gaming life operating from the equivalent of a gaming cupboard so this is kind of a child like over reaction to finally being granted a bit of space. Never met him but Karl Eagles name is well known to re enactors of a certain age, lol. There were a few like him around back in the day.
DeleteSmall world eh I’ve been up to Marske Hall several times - fancy you living near there! Sadly Pennymans within the ECWS has folded due to politics and internal feuding at the highest level. I was invited to join Lumsdens but I was living in France at that point and I didn’t want to get involved in all of that nonsense.
Yeah I’m very lucky with TCMB - who has always supported my love of history and has put up with all my silly fads and hobbies for 40 years. A damned good woman (with an Irish Passport) and “skillz” as the kids say.
JBM I have to agree with everyone you are very lucky with the talented Current* Mrs Broom.
ReplyDeleteGreat collection of 1:1 scale toys and they do give a real sense of history for the games.
I also find playing real contemporary wars unsettling. Oddly I will play WW2 but not WW1.
To get my fix and use my toys I happily go off in imaginations and alternative history which is also nonsensical.
* I assume this term keeps her on her toes 😁 - "you can be replaced!"
Hey Ben, yeah she’s only “current” cos I could be replaced at the drop of a hat by someone better looking, more intelligent and who has more money (which wouldn’t be hard these days). I’m punching above my weight - and have been for a good long time.
DeleteGood to know you are winning then! 😂 keep rolling sixes to keep her.
DeleteHmm - I look at that little lot JBM and I am not surprised your wallet is empty! I suppose you think the fact that it's all Dark Ages, Medieval or Renaissance somehow makes it less insane than if it was all MG34's, Schmeisser's and swastikas.....eh??!
ReplyDelete"Philosophical question. Is reenacting or war gaming military conflicts from beyond living memory more palatable? Is anyone doing Ukraine / Russia yet? And if they were how would you feel about it? Discuss. "
Re enacting Afghanistan or Vietnam - yeah, that would be a bit weird - in fact dressing up as anything post 1900 is a bit odd - ok lets face it, most people except actors stop playing dress up when they are ten - sorry, I have said it!
Playing games - don't have such an issue - I personally have "War on Terror" 20mm figures - including a 1/72 scale Predator UAV - and like Steve J, I recently (within the last month) saw a blog where they had played a Russians v Ukrainians platoon level game with BMP's or BTR's etc - and I know people have played the war in Chechnya - I think Stu at Dust, Tears and Dice Blog may have posted about such a game. If a person who was involved in one of those conflicts found it distasteful, fair enough but here in NZ I am 99% certain never to meet one who would have any reason to know I played a game in that conflict, so what the eye doesn't see, the heart won't grieve over!
Hello grumpy. Did you get out of the wrong side of the bed this morning down there in that antipodean paradise? :-)
DeleteNo, I realise that collecting militaria is all insane - but I suspect there’s levels of insanity - some of which I haven’t yet plummeted too. As to dressing up being a bit silly, for me it was a way of combining a love of history with an easy way of interacting with others. I’m not comfortable around people in the general sense, but for some reason being notionally someone else while dressed up made the problem disappear (which I have to agree IS weird). So you could see it as silly / frivolous / self indulgent and strange etc but the wife and I used to do living history classes for kids in school so there was an educational aspect which I still think made it worthwhile for others as well as me. Is it as silly as pushing tiny metal men around thinking we’re some sort of Napoleon or Patton? Perhaps we should all have grown out of that too after passing the age of ten? Each to his own I suppose. On the recent wars topic, I’m not judging folk who play more up to date games I was focussing more on my strangely unspoken and unthought through avoidance of same. Maybe I didn’t articulate that too well. Apologies.
Nah it was just a tongue in cheek piss take but that's the problem with text as opposed to face to face - 95% of the nuance is lost! Totally agree, we probably SHOULD grown out of playing with toy soldiers around the age of ten but I am quite glad I didn't :)
DeleteNice collection of stuff, I'm not surprised your wallet is empty! It's all good but the matchlock is my favourite, although I really like the Adrian helmet, I almost bought one when I was in college in Nottingham and it was dirt cheap. My sister bought me a reproduction early 16th century closed helmet for a significant birthday, it's in a box in the loft I'm afraid as I haven't any room in the shed, although I do have an Austin 7 steering wheel? I think theres very valid reasons for walking in the reconstructed shoes of our ancestors to gain a better understanding, swinging a rubber sword or not! I have to admit to shying away from more modern conflicts and had to be dragged by peer pressure from my nephews into ww2 and chose Soviets as I have no connection whatsoever, I did have to go to Essex to meet a man about a gun in his lock up in a seemingly abandoned industrial estate festooned with Nazi flags, it was to say the least a little uncomfortable!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Hi Iain. You’re a man after my own heart it seems. Lol. An Austin 7 steering wheel you say? Very exotic! I bet there’s some car nut out there who’d give his right arm for it.
DeleteAlso…Crikey was it you there, that day at the lock up…. :-)
Wonderful collection JBM and those early French helmets are so iconic. I was going to say that I hope to get my hands on your French helmet when I come to stay next year! Musket looks great on the wall, I'm surprised it does not need to be kept in a locked gun cabinet as here, no requirement for a shotgun license either? I always thought it mad having to keep my ACW Enfield locked away, I mean nobody was ever going to rob a bank with it were they? What I had to do to get that license for it, locks on all windows replaced, front door lock replaced! Your room is coming along a treat.
ReplyDeleteHey Lee, good to hear from you matey.I was surprised that the musket isn’t an issue out here too. When I went round to the neighbours last week his actively used shotgun was just leaning up against the kitchen wall! My understanding is that the main restriction is applied to ammo. It’s virtually impossible to get it here unless you have all the right permits (or you can drive to Belgium and buy it over the counter) lol. The Enfield would have been a more serious thing than my musket and I’m not surprised they made you update your security.
DeleteDrop us a couple of lines when you get a mo to let me know how you’re getting on.
A splendid collection of big boys toys JBM…
ReplyDeleteI used to have a few Light Machine Guns… It was an attempt to start a collection centred on weapons used during the Spanish Civil War… After all the hassle moving them around in a few house moves I decided to get rid of them… No matter how many blankets and bin bags you wrap a gun in…When you carry it out to the car….. It still looks like a gun😳
All the best. Aly
Only a few LMG’s? I d have put you down for a bloomin’ howitzer! Seriously though they can become a real millstone around your neck can’t they. The games not really worth the candle as my granny would have said. I’m trying to work out what LMG’s they’d have been in the SCW. Hotchkiss? Something Soviet? Maybe the one with the big round ammo pan on the top?
DeleteAs the cool kids say, that made me lmao! I once had to retrieve multiple guns & swords from a Son’s car in the midst of a sudden move, after an accident, already secured & wrapped in historical quilts. Um, nothing to see here dear neighbors. (Wave of hand.) Move along. Move along . . .
Delete~ TT
I’m very envious of your wargaming room. I have to wander between our small conservatory and an upstairs box room, games downstairs modelling, painting and research upstairs. Neither one is really suitable for displaying weapons, wouldn’t do to upset the locals when they visit. Still I’m lucky to have a dedicated hobby space at all I suppose. Like you I’d only want to display stuff I have a personal connection too. My Matchlock has to live in a security cabinet so I couldn’t display it. On a seperate topic mine is also named, she is Bessie.
ReplyDeleteActually the whole post looks a bit show offy on reflection doesn’t it?! Soz. I’ve done my time like you and 99% of other wargamers in broom cupboards, lofts and sheds. If I was in the UK I could not have afforded a house as big as this one and I’d still be gaming on a 3x3 board and having to put everything away tidy when it was time for tea. I am a very lucky guy. With that said if you can ever get to Limoges airport (cheapo flight on Ryanair) pop over and stay for a couple of days. We could get a game in!
DeleteJBM, Mark ~ No it’s not at all show offy. It was a true pleasure to see & experience vicariously! My first thought was that’s some seriously nice kit being Collected. (It’s a shame that you had to part with most of yours earlier. But I do understand all of the various reasons.) It’s inspiring to see you begin to acquire some really nice pieces again. My second thought was TCMBM must have some serious funding available to support you! My third was, you *actually* Know what you are talking about. Respect for your lived experiences.
ReplyDeleteAs to your real main question regarding what & when we are comfortable playing, as a game? I’ve personally always been fascinated by both combined arms & the various transitional periods through out history. Preferably separated by enough time from the here & now. But, though I’ve happily played so many of them, I’m always somehow been uncomfortable with the ACW (where’s my cavalry?!?) & later. I’m sort of enjoying a current Friday night Russian front WWII zoom game we’re playing now. It’s an interesting system & challenge. (And lots of beer is involved.) But I find myself uncomfortable. My Father served in WWII & my Father in !aw was seriously wounded leading his company in the lead up to the assault of Saint-Lo. (And, later, again in Korea.) One of the Dudes put on a magnificent set of linked Normandy hedgerow country side games, that i made the terrain for years ago. After the ‘game’ I gave them each a facsimile copy of The Colonel’s Vmail Home. (Paraphrasing, but here’s the essence.) Dear Mother and Father, I am writing as soon as I could in case you have already heard otherwise. I was only slightly wounded. It was just a graze. The German machine gun bullet spun my helmet about my head. I’ll rejoin my unit as soon as I can.
I’ve amassed a huge Collection of GW Epic scale SM stuff to work on in my dotage. I just a really like the 2nd edition rules. It’s a Fun game. But, well, other than the sci-fi aspects the destruction & methods of destruction are just too much like what is happening in the Real World for me. I don’t think that I’ll ever play it again. Which sucks.
You asked. Another tuppence thrown in. Roll your bones.
~ Tom T
Sorry about the delay in replying Tom but we’ve had some pretty severe storms here and the internet has been constantly off and on. Anywhoo. Every time I hear the stories of guys in WWII I’m frankly amazed. What courage, what grit. Have any of us today got the same strength within us. I’d like to think so, but I somehow doubt it. Helmet spun around by an MG bullet and then went on to serve in Korea? Balls of steel. Small world though, I had to go through Saint-Lo in May. Just seems like a normal place until you read things like that. I often find it weird that I’m profoundly opposed to war in general, yet I’m simultaneously fascinated by its minutia. I blame that Y chromosome.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your Thoughts. Time for my apologia for such a delayed response Mark. Yes, balls of steel in that generation ~ not that they had much choice. Well, what generation does, when it really comes down to it? Sometimes there isn’t a choice. Look up photos of the assault on St-Lo from back then. I don’t know how they could do it. Other than, like always, it had to be done. I based the terrain for the scenario on official maps & dispatches. Yeah, I kind of freaked out a bit when I later learned, when we talked about it, that it included The Colonel’s command. (He wasn’t a Colonel until Korea.)
DeleteI too participated in small & large medieval & renaissance full contact combat for a couple of decades. Armoured melee & taught street garb rapier through those same decades. Mainly Capo Ferro & DeGrassi, but Silver too. (Rapier was my main thrust ~ pardon the pun) Trust me, my body still feels some of it. (Back against a heating pad as I write this. Finally lost that chipped tooth. I was much younger & dumber then. Weren’t youthful hormones & adrenaline great?!?) I’m Thankful that somehow I was in the age gap that just missed the draft for Vietnam.
After our imminent move (forty years later we’ve suddenly been gentrified out), I have to find a way to properly display my Cherbourg armour. (No names to protect the ‘innocent’.) My HS Best Friend & Brother was doing an Apprenticeship at the Tower, before he went onto the Met as an armour conservator, when it came through for cleaning en route to ~ I suddenly can’t remember! (Glasgow, Ireland?) He made patterns & recreated it as a Gift for me when he returned. Well, the breast & back plates, fauld & tassets, & articulated gauntlets. Deer brain tanning for the strapping. What can I say? We were enthusiastic, but Hopefully not obnoxious, thread counters. All I had to Gift him with was a very heavy silver personal signet ring.
My live steel swept hilt rapier & matching dagger hang on the wall above my main computer. Perhaps awkward to reach in a pinch. But if the zombies come calling I have plenty of close quarter answers for the slow shambling hordes! (Well, okay, where I live I might have some longer range answers too.)
Huh. Now that’s an interesting question! What do you grab when the zombies come calling? No time to armour up! I’m fairly ambidextrous with blades. Rapier right hand, heavy Mountain Philippines killing machete my Father acquired in the late fifties in my left. Sling shotgun, or Bess, on my back. Hmm. I might just have to make that figure
Sorry to muddle on so long. Just learned that an Old Friend & former Student passed. Inappropriate of me to mention. I know. Just still shaken.
~ Tom T
~ Tom T