Need Wallet and Sheath
Need Wallet and Sheath
I'm almost done with a loong term project, a long knife I'm calling a BaurnSeax, and am doing the sheath for it, after a long time debating on various methods of hanging it I'm going to go with a vertical hang designed to work with my need wallet.
Here's my current progress I have thesheath shaped using the technique from the Winter 2017 issue of Edge of the Wild. And the paper pattern on my take on Ellet's Need Wallet from the Summer 2016 issue.
Here's my current progress I have thesheath shaped using the technique from the Winter 2017 issue of Edge of the Wild. And the paper pattern on my take on Ellet's Need Wallet from the Summer 2016 issue.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
- Elleth
- êphal ki-*raznahê
- Posts: 2937
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2010 5:26 am
- Location: in the Angle; New England
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
That looks like they're going to be AMAZING! How very cool.
I've been mystified about that hole-and-slit-and-stud/strap in the sheath, but I think I figured it out this morning... for a nagel?
The cultural mashup here is really intriguing: I can't wait to see what it looks like all done!
I've been mystified about that hole-and-slit-and-stud/strap in the sheath, but I think I figured it out this morning... for a nagel?
The cultural mashup here is really intriguing: I can't wait to see what it looks like all done!
Persona: Aerlinneth, Dúnedain of Amon Lendel c. TA 3010.
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Wow, good eye for detail.That's exactly it. The BaurnSeax has a nagel, and so I am using the stud and strap to act as support for the end of the sheath.Elleth wrote:I've been mystified about that hole-and-slit-and-stud/strap in the sheath, but I think I figured it out this morning... for a nagel?
Yeah, I'm trying it out, we'll see if it works. The traditional view of the North (At least the Shire & Bree) is a mashup of 18th c. and 8th c. with a liberal helping of high medieval.Elleth wrote:The cultural mashup here is really intriguing: I can't wait to see what it looks like all done!
The idea I'm playing with is that once you get out into the woods, the 18th century overlay drops off, and the high medieval/migration era fusion ramps up. So I'm trying to see how well 14th/15th c. objects work with a migration era aesthetic. (What if Ulberht had a Landsknect client?)
The other thing I'm doing is trying to do is reduce the amount of metal in almost everything. So the need-wallet's buckes are bone, and the traditionally copper alloy seax sheath fittings are leather, etc.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Hmm I would be interested in hearing your reasons for this direction. I would think Eriador (or Shire and Bree at least) would have ready access to metal via dwarves, and possibly their own blacksmiths. It's not like Beorn, who is explicitly described as having next-to-no metal objects.caedmon wrote:The other thing I'm doing is trying to do is reduce the amount of metal in almost everything. So the need-wallet's buckes are bone, and the traditionally copper alloy seax sheath fittings are leather, etc.
Looking forward to the finished products regardless.
Personae: Aistan son of Ansteig, common Beorning of Wilderland; Tungo Brandybuck, Eastfarthing Bounder, 3018 TA; a native Man of the Greyflood, c.850 SA
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
A few reasons:Udwin wrote:Hmm I would be interested in hearing your reasons for this direction. I would think Eriador (or Shire and Bree at least) would have ready access to metal via dwarves, and possibly their own blacksmiths.caedmon wrote:The other thing I'm doing is trying to do is reduce the amount of metal in almost everything.
- One of the very few descriptions we have of presumably non-royal dunedain was that save for the star brooch there was no glint of metal
- Musing that the Dunedain are 'house rich and cash poor'. Yeah there are heirlooms of incredible value, but clothes are well patched and and metal is saved for plowshares, and axe heads.
- Bone objects like buckles are well attested in the archaeological record, but under represented in reenactment.
- It's a way to play with shapes with material that change the possibilities. For example a canon bone cut at an angle make a really nicely shaped dunedain buckle.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
- Elleth
- êphal ki-*raznahê
- Posts: 2937
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2010 5:26 am
- Location: in the Angle; New England
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
This line?
Which hardly means that they couldn't use bone, of course - only that I don't see the passage as implying iron or darkened bronze are uncommon either.
But again, we've all our own mental image. I think bone buckles could look really cool, and I can't wait to see the final product.
(edit - hunh... after a bit of looking around, I'd no idea they held on so long. I'd seen the occasional picture but always assumed they largely fell out of use by around the turn of the millennium. Interesting...)
I confess that doesn't read to me as if they were desperately poor of metal - rather that their dress was muted and that they eschewed bright ornamentation.A little apart the Rangers sat, silent, in an ordered company, armed with spear and bow and sword. They were clad in cloaks of dark grey, and their hoods were cast now over helm and head. Their horses were strong and of proud bearing, but rough-haired; and one stood there without a rider, Aragorn’s own horse that they had brought from the North; Roheryn was his name. There was no gleam of stone or gold, nor any fair thing in all their gear and harness: nor did their riders bear any badge or token, save only that each cloak was pinned upon the left shoulder by a brooch of silver shaped like a rayed star.
ROTK, Bk V Ch2: The Passing of the Grey Company
Which hardly means that they couldn't use bone, of course - only that I don't see the passage as implying iron or darkened bronze are uncommon either.
But again, we've all our own mental image. I think bone buckles could look really cool, and I can't wait to see the final product.
(edit - hunh... after a bit of looking around, I'd no idea they held on so long. I'd seen the occasional picture but always assumed they largely fell out of use by around the turn of the millennium. Interesting...)
Persona: Aerlinneth, Dúnedain of Amon Lendel c. TA 3010.
- Greg
- Urush bithî 'nKi ya-nam bawâb
- Posts: 4498
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2008 8:50 pm
- Location: Eriador; Central Indiana
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
I agree that I didn't read the passage as saying minimal in metals (particularly because there's a plethora of weaponry and armor present, so the crafting of metals is blatantly available) but I'm REALLY digging where you're headed with this.
How're you approaching the leather wrap for the scabbard, given the significant elevation changes due to the byknife/tools, etc? I'm in the middle of wrapping mine, and am still pondering methods since leather can only stretch 'so much'.
That is a fantastic summary of the otherwise confusing melting pot in Eriador. Saved.caedmon wrote:The idea I'm playing with is that once you get out into the woods, the 18th century overlay drops off, and the high medieval/migration era fusion ramps up. So I'm trying to see how well 14th/15th c. objects work with a migration era aesthetic.
How're you approaching the leather wrap for the scabbard, given the significant elevation changes due to the byknife/tools, etc? I'm in the middle of wrapping mine, and am still pondering methods since leather can only stretch 'so much'.
Now the sword shall come from under the cloak.
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Yeah, I don't really think they were that poor either. It's mostly a mental exercise I went on whilst meditating on the passage. But also bone/morse doesn't necessary imply poor.Elleth wrote:This line?I confess that doesn't read to me as if they were desperately poor of metal - rather that their dress was muted and that they eschewed bright ornamentation.A little apart the Rangers sat, silent, in an ordered company, armed with spear and bow and sword. They were clad in cloaks of dark grey, and their hoods were cast now over helm and head. Their horses were strong and of proud bearing, but rough-haired; and one stood there without a rider, Aragorn’s own horse that they had brought from the North; Roheryn was his name. There was no gleam of stone or gold, nor any fair thing in all their gear and harness: nor did their riders bear any badge or token, save only that each cloak was pinned upon the left shoulder by a brooch of silver shaped like a rayed star.
ROTK, Bk V Ch2: The Passing of the Grey Company
Which hardly means that they couldn't use bone, of course - only that I don't see the passage as implying iron or darkened bronze are uncommon either.
But again, we've all our own mental image. I think bone buckles could look really cool, and I can't wait to see the final product.
(edit - hunh... after a bit of looking around, I'd no idea they held on so long. I'd seen the occasional picture but always assumed they largely fell out of use by around the turn of the millennium. Interesting...)
As for late bone buckles, check these 15th c. buckles out:
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Greg wrote:How're you approaching the leather wrap for the scabbard, given the significant elevation changes due to the byknife/tools, etc? I'm in the middle of wrapping mine, and am still pondering methods since leather can only stretch 'so much'.
I'm following the Museum of London Knives & Scabbards book, and doing separate inner sheaths of goatskin. I'm hoping that offset holes and wetforming the outer sheathe will be enough, but we'll see.
Also, nobody seems to do sheathes where the by-knives are pointed the other direction (I'll probably find out why). I'm hoping it's just because horizontal suspension is not common.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
- Greg
- Urush bithî 'nKi ya-nam bawâb
- Posts: 4498
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2008 8:50 pm
- Location: Eriador; Central Indiana
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
That'd be my guess. Keep the fit snug, or you'll engineer the problem yourself!caedmon wrote:I'm hoping it's just because horizontal suspension is not common.
Now the sword shall come from under the cloak.
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
And here's where I'm at with the need wallet. Buckles are proving trickier than I intended. (Note to self: It's easier to cut strap to fit existing buckles than to manufacture buckles to fit strap.)
The inner lining is inspired by a piece Jake Book did several years back. I'd link it, but can't seem to find it. A closer look at the incised design, a fairly straight forward Numeonrean/Dunedain plant motif.
The inner lining is inspired by a piece Jake Book did several years back. I'd link it, but can't seem to find it. A closer look at the incised design, a fairly straight forward Numeonrean/Dunedain plant motif.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
- Greg
- Urush bithî 'nKi ya-nam bawâb
- Posts: 4498
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2008 8:50 pm
- Location: Eriador; Central Indiana
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Those accordion sides are inspired. Very nice!
Now the sword shall come from under the cloak.
- Elleth
- êphal ki-*raznahê
- Posts: 2937
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2010 5:26 am
- Location: in the Angle; New England
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
Hunh - I had wondered what that extra stitching was for. Very cool!
I've seen 18th c. shot pouches done that way - I'm very curious to hear how this works out! Very neat!
re/ buckles: if you're using metal mounting plates, I could imagine you could make up some length by mounting them a little bit further out and willing the gap with leather scrap? I've done that kind of cheat before, and assuming there's not a lot of stress on it and there's still enough meat at the end of the "real" strap it works okay.
.... also the kind of thing that would have been done in the real materials-poor period.
I've seen 18th c. shot pouches done that way - I'm very curious to hear how this works out! Very neat!
re/ buckles: if you're using metal mounting plates, I could imagine you could make up some length by mounting them a little bit further out and willing the gap with leather scrap? I've done that kind of cheat before, and assuming there's not a lot of stress on it and there's still enough meat at the end of the "real" strap it works okay.
.... also the kind of thing that would have been done in the real materials-poor period.
Persona: Aerlinneth, Dúnedain of Amon Lendel c. TA 3010.
- Iodo
- Thangailhir
- Posts: 2112
- Joined: Mon Sep 25, 2017 5:58 pm
- Location: North west england UK
- Contact:
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
I agree, are the sides a folded semicircular pattern?Greg wrote:Those accordion sides are inspired. Very nice!
Gimli: It's true you don't see many Dwarf-women. And in fact, they are so alike in voice and appearance, that they are often mistaken for Dwarf-men.
Aragorn: It's the beards.
Aragorn: It's the beards.
Re: Need Wallet and Sheath
I never posted a pattern for the wallet. Since there's a renewed interest, here it is.
Oh, the pattern for the wallet and accordion is really simple. I do all my work with veg tanned leather, any suppleness is by working fat/leather dressing in afterward. The accordion is simply wet formed. I just wet the sides down, folded them into shape and left them to dry between a couple boards.
Oh, the pattern for the wallet and accordion is really simple. I do all my work with veg tanned leather, any suppleness is by working fat/leather dressing in afterward. The accordion is simply wet formed. I just wet the sides down, folded them into shape and left them to dry between a couple boards.
-Jack Horner
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017
----------------------------
Impression: Cædmon Reedmace | bronze founder living in Archet, Breeland. c. 3017