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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Sat Sep 24, 2011 6:54 am     Mail from Cap a Pie |   |  
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				| Has anyone bought mail from Cap-a-pie? They're an English company making blackened riveted mail. I'd like to hear of any comments on the fit
 and wear of their mail. http://www.capapie.co.uk/
 
 They also use The Maille Tailor for alterations. Has anyone any comment on
 this chaps service? http://www.mailletailor.co.uk/ I'm looking at
 using him to make an aventail for a bascinet from Jolly Knight Armoury
 http://jollyknight.com.ua/armoury/index.php?cPath=21_27.
 
 Last edited by JohnF on Sun Sep 25, 2011 7:32 am; edited 1 time in total
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		| pmel018 Principal Sponsor
 
 
 Location: Wokingham, near Reading, UK
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Sep 25, 2011 2:17 am |   |  
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				| I have met this guy at a number of events and seen his mail. It's certainly among the best of the current crop of riveted mail, still made in India, but nice all the same. Can't comment on the other vendor.
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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Sep 25, 2011 7:31 am |   |  
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				| Cheers Phil. Cap-a-pie seemed good when I looked through their website. It's nice to have a third party comment on their quality.
 
 Do you know if their default hauberks are tailored with a narrow waist, fitted
 sleeves, and a proper armpit that allows full range of motion? Probably a
 question I can now direct at Cap-a-pie, but if you can comment that'd be
 nice.
 
 What about wear and tear on undergarments from the rivets?
 
 I know that GDFB make riveted mail, but it has a tubular chest and t-shirt
 style join for the arms, and the sleeves make wearers look like they have
 bingo wings. Which is why I've been looking around, and found Cap-a-pie.
 I'm aware that I'll need to get any mail garment tailored, it's just a question
 of how much. Because Cap-a-pie are good, I'll trust their recommendation
 of The Maille Tailor.
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		| Callum Sponsor
 
  
 Location: Upper Hutt
 
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				|  Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 10:50 am |   |  
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				| I get my riveted mail from SN Exports (India) and can vouch not only for the quality but also for its robustness - I have taken several off-target hits and lance deflections in the joust where the impact of the hit has been taken on the maille and not only has it withstood the impact with little or no damage but also prevented me from getting serious injuries on a number of occassions. 
 You can get SN maille from King of Swords but I can also order from them direct and if you (or anybody else) are interested I am placing an order later this week (mostly for a full maille horse trapper - it should look awesome
  ) 
 www.snexports.com
 _________________
 Callum Forbes
 Order of the Boar - www.jousting.co.nz
 
 Order of the Boar Historical Foot Combat -
 www.hapkido.org.nz/upperhutt.html
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		| mikronn 
 
 
 Location: Plimmerton
 
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				|  Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 1:06 pm     Rivetted maille |   |  
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				| Hi John and all 
 I got some of the SN Exports riveted maille last time Callum did an order and it both fits and works well.
 
 Wearing it just over a leine (as the gallowglass apparently did and didn't) was comfortable enough and I've taken a few hits with nothing other than mild bruising and no obvious damage to the maille
 
 With a belt around the natural waist it sits nicely on the shoulders and doesn't really seem to slow me down.
 
 Wasn't that expensive either
 
 cheers
 
 mike
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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 6:16 pm |   |  
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				| Thanks for the pointer to SN Exports. Are they the company that supplies mail to GDFB? Have you been able to supply them measurements, or do
 they only work on chest size? Callum, Mike, what link diameter, gauge,
 finish, shape, and rivet type do you have?
 
 Callum, thanks for the offer of combining shipping. I'll pass for now. I won't
 be buying mail till next year. Given the price it's worth spending a little time
 shopping around. It'd be good to see a video of your horse once it's wearing
 the trapper.
 
 Last edited by JohnF on Tue Sep 27, 2011 6:07 pm; edited 1 time in total
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		| mikronn 
 
 
 Location: Plimmerton
 
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				|  Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 8:43 pm     Rivetted maille |   |  
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				| Hi John 
 Not sure if they supply GDFB - Callum may know. I do know the guy came out here and Callum introduced him to Richard Taylor, who was interested in his stuff!
 
 The maille is flat ring, wedge riveted, ID of the links is 9mm. Finish is dull (but not galvanised) and the maille arrived well oiled. Some of that is now on my leine but hey, its accurate! The links are 2 mm wide and ~1mm thick and combined in the classic 5-in-1 section style.
 
 As I noted the fit is very good indeed and once on and properly set I have found training for several hours to be no major issue.
 
 He does measure on chest size but i have found the other fit is fine
 
 hope that helps
 
 cheers
 
 mike
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		| Callum Sponsor
 
  
 Location: Upper Hutt
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Sep 27, 2011 10:22 am |   |  
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				| Hi John, 
 PM sent.
 
 In hindsight I would have ordered Mike's haubergeon in the next size up as the sizing charts don't factor in underlying padding. Because Mike portrays an Irish 'Gallowglas' he doesn't need padding but if he decided to portray something else and use padding then the haubergeon would be a little tight. So if you decide to order maille items from KoS, GDFB or whoever than you should take this into account.
 _________________
 Callum Forbes
 Order of the Boar - www.jousting.co.nz
 
 Order of the Boar Historical Foot Combat -
 www.hapkido.org.nz/upperhutt.html
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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Sep 27, 2011 7:29 pm |   |  
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				| I've done a little more reading. I'm fairly certain I'd prefer a tailored mail shirt. It'll cost more, but it'll weigh less and fit better (yes I did read
 Callum's and Mike's comment on the good fit of SN mail). Here's a
 diagram showing how a suit in the Wallace Collection was tailored.
 I don't know the date of manufacture.
 
   A	Two lines of expansions over the shoulders.
 B	Row contractions to taper the sleeves.
 C	Two lines of contractions under the shoulder blades to compensate
 for the expansions over the shoulders. Original suit has nine contractions
 per set with one contraction every four rows.
 D	Contractions for waist. Wallace suit has two sets of four
 contractions; one at the front and the other at the rear.
 E	Expansions for the hips. Original suit has four lines of these, two at
 the sides and one at the front and back. Each line has one expansion per
 four rows.
 F	Two knot type row expansions per side to make the back of the suit
 four rows longer than the front.
 
 It's from http://homepage.ntlworld.com/trevor.barker/farisles/guilds/armour/mail.htm
 
 Compare this with the SN design, which does have decent armpits, but
 doesn't explicitly show that it has been made with contractions and
 expansions elsewhere on the garment.
 
   
 When the time comes I'll ask SN about tailoring. If they do I'll compare
 that with Cap-a-pie+The Maille Tailor's price, and see if anyone in NZ is
 wanting to do a parallel import.
 
 Callum, thanks for the reminder about sizing.  It is important to get it
 right. I'm flipping coins between CoP or other cuirass. But I can't get them
 until I know what my measurements are in mail, and I can't do that until I
 have a 14th C gambie.
 
 1366 Turingen Gambie from Jolly Knight Armoury http://jollyknight.com.ua/ $150USD
 
   
 Cuirass from JKA
 
   
 CoP from Winter Tree Crafts http://www.wintertreecrafts.com/CoP.html $475USD
 
     
 Last edited by JohnF on Wed Sep 28, 2011 5:43 am; edited 2 times in total
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		| mikronn 
 
 
 Location: Plimmerton
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Sep 27, 2011 8:03 pm     Maille and cover |   |  
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				| Hi John 
 Understand completely - hope the maille works out well for you. myArmory also had a few good threads recently on maille.
 
 I wear a relatively cheap brigandine over the maille for WMA. I've modified it a bit - Callum and I both replaced the inner lining with something heavier. I've since added some shoulder plates as well - bloke in the UK made them but now I've seen them I'd be relatively confident to do it myself.
 
 Not exactly period nor in keeping with the gaelglaich (galloglas) but probably safer. Callum also made me wear shoes and padded cuisses last time as well
   
 On that note - sparring with the sparth is out as well!
 
 cheers
 
 mike
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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Sep 27, 2011 9:12 pm |   |  
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				| I also do a bit of reading at myArmoury. 
 Dan Howard writes well thought out articles and posts on myArmoury.
 Such as  http://www.myarmoury.com/feature_mail.html.  He
 wrote a neat thread about the merits of Indian mail vs the good stuff that
 Erik D. Schmid makes. Though I can't find it now. Little things like how
 soft iron will deform and prevent the weapon from penetrating, as
 opposed to hard steels which snap.
 
 Brigandine appears to fit a better range than solid plate. Suitable for
 wearing with or without mail, yes? Mike, do you have any pics of your
 brigandine? Which period is it based on?
 
 One of the books I own specifically mention English infantry assaulting a
 hill held by the Scots, barefoot. Bound to be many other examples.
 Wearing the right footwear, or not, is important if we are interested in
 fighting in the way of the ancients. Footwear with thick soles are for
 marching long distances, heels are for stirrups, thin soled footwear is
 preferred for combat. John Clements wrote a researched article about this
 at http://www.thearma.org/essays/historical-footwear.html.
 Once the soles are thin enough, or you're barefoot, it becomes possible to
 grip the ground with our toes. Some modern soles prevent pivoting, which
 means the foot must be lifted off the ground - and that's slower. Also
 watched a TED talk by a marathon runner. He argued that shoes are the
 leading cause of injuries in long distance runners, and that running
 barefoot is much better for your body. I've noticed a change in my
 fencing since switching from rubber soles to a 14th C style shoe (although
 it has thickened leather sole).
 
 There's always a trade off when we want to be safe. Armour up, pull
 blows, soften weapons, or change the distance or timing. I choose shoes
 
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		| mikronn 
 
 
 Location: Plimmerton
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2011 8:53 am     Maille and brigandine |   |  
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				| Hi John 
 I tend to wear just the brig for normal WMA classes. Nice amount of protection, good weight. Goes really weall over the maille though.
 
 The brigandine follows (well sort of I'm sure they overlapped) the coat of plates and was 14-15th century generally, itself overlapping the plate armor that followed. I bought mine from Kult of Athena - made by Windlass.
 
 There is a picture in the Osprey Galloglass 1250 - 1600 (Fergus Cannan) that shows one galloglas apparently wearing a brig. As the galloglas were Hebridean/Scots in origin its not too surprising. It also seems like the Irish tended to be a little behing the rest of Europse -probably a combination of tradition and relative wealth.
 
 In the same image, one of the fighters wears turnshow style boots and the other just sandals. The kern are barefoot.
 
 There was a good recent thread on myArmory about the discovery of some shoes with rope attacked across the heel and forward part of the sole - for grip.
 
 I have to say for armed combat I agree with you John. I was being clever with a training partner and she parried a kick with her longsword blunt. Lovely bruise!
 
 cheers
 
 mike
 
 
 
 
	
		
	 
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		| Callum Sponsor
 
  
 Location: Upper Hutt
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2011 2:59 pm |   |  
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				| Hi John, 
 Looks as if you have a good solid plan for your kit and you can't beat the tailored stuff. Doing the research first is also good as you will save yourself a lot of money by "doing it once and doing it right".
 
 I am in the process of making a similar CoP myself using bacially the same colour of leather.
 _________________
 Callum Forbes
 Order of the Boar - www.jousting.co.nz
 
 Order of the Boar Historical Foot Combat -
 www.hapkido.org.nz/upperhutt.html
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		| Bogue Sponsor
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2011 5:38 pm |   |  
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				| Just a note on leather foundation CoP. 
 Could I suggest that you line with a canvas or heavy linen as this will prevent a lot of stretch in the leather.
 And by "Line" I mean glue it to the back of the leather.
 It is also cheaper to make up as a mock-up for sizing and then glue panels to leather with the seam allowance already included.
 
 For a really good pattern I suggest this:-
 
 http://www.armourarchive.org/patterns/brig/
 
 Anything on AA done by Sinric (Craig Nadler) is awesome and some.
 This has to be the sexiest Brig on earth:-
 
 http://www.eskimo.com/~cwn/brig_craig1.html
 
 Just my $1:50 worth
 
 cheers
 Bogue
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		| JohnF 
 
  
 Location: Palmy
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Oct 07, 2011 8:44 pm |   |  
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				|  	  | Bogue wrote: |  	  | Just a note on leather foundation CoP. 
 Could I suggest that you line with a canvas or heavy linen as this will
 prevent a lot of stretch in the leather.
 And by "Line" I mean glue it to the back of the leather.
 
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 Thanks for the tip Bogue.
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