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PoD

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  1. Got my new sword from Armour Class last week. Its their Schiavona Re-enactment With Shark Skin Grip but I had it modified with the blade from the hanger they sell put onto it instead of the broadsword blade it originally had.

    Ahh, great stuff!

    By reenactment blade, do you mean that this is one with blunted edges and a rounded tip?

    Love their work. I've got 3- an irish hilt backsword, a halfbasket mortuary, and a pikeman's hanger- all combat blunts. I'm waiting for them to come up with a cutlass that I like.

    Hawkyns

    yep its the blunted blade with the rounded tip. Just learning sword play so thought I'd better start blunt else i'd have my own leg off.

  2. Got my new sword from Armour Class last week. Its their Schiavona Re-enactment With Shark Skin Grip but I had it modified with the blade from the hanger they sell put onto it instead of the broadsword blade it originally had.

    sword1.jpg

    sword2.jpg

  3. This site http://cf.hum.uva.nl/galle/avondster/finds.html claims that Tea was actually shipped in storage jars. Some of these Jars were recovered from the wreck of the Avondster that sank in 1659 on its way to India.

    98-GHL-01_storagejar_250x306.jpg03-GHL-153_jar_350x407.jpg98-GHL-10_storagejar_400x493.jpg

    Storage jars are always found on ships of this period. They were used as containers for sugar, salt, tea, salted fish, candied fruit, butter, oil, wine, spirits, opium, and even holy water and mud from the Ganges. More prosaically, they were used to store drinking water. Jars like that on the far right are known as martabans (in Dutch, martavan), after Martaban in Burma where they were originally made; the word came to be used for similar jars from all over Asia.

  4. I just came across these examples of Medicine Jars recovered from the wreck of the Dutch vessel Avondster which sank in 1659.

    medjars_500x232.jpg

    98-GHL-26-27-20_medicinejars3_600x385.jpg

    Medicine jars were found in the stern. One contained mercury, used in the seventeenth century for treating a whole range of ailments. The contents of another jars are being analysed.

    http://cf.hum.uva.nl/galle/avondster/finds.html">http://cf.hum.uva.nl/galle/avondster/finds.html

  5. I really enjoyed seeing the work on the Pub. Thank You. If you have further interest in the period work I can find out if the museum published a catalog on the exhibit. They generally do. I can ask my cousin who's a docent there. If you appreciate this piece some of the work at the exhibit was just over the top! It was pointed out that in some work the artist was obviously not a mariner by wave pattern to wind direction (sail set) but the minute detail of the painting was incredible and flawless! I'd be glad to research the book for you if you are interested.

    Thanks again for posting the work and close ups! All the Best! Dutch "X" his mark

    That would be cool if they had a catalogue. Maybe we can find some of the works online then and I can get some more analysis done.

    I shall call on Monday and find out what I can. I've yet to see an exhibit at the Peabody-Essex that didn't offer a full color catalogue covering the exhibit. This work was on loan from a Royal Museum in Great Britton.

    If you can find out which museum I might be able to go and see them myself then

  6. I really enjoyed seeing the work on the Pub. Thank You. If you have further interest in the period work I can find out if the museum published a catalog on the exhibit. They generally do. I can ask my cousin who's a docent there. If you appreciate this piece some of the work at the exhibit was just over the top! It was pointed out that in some work the artist was obviously not a mariner by wave pattern to wind direction (sail set) but the minute detail of the painting was incredible and flawless! I'd be glad to research the book for you if you are interested.

    Thanks again for posting the work and close ups! All the Best! Dutch "X" his mark

    That would be cool if they had a catalogue. Maybe we can find some of the works online then and I can get some more analysis done.

  7. After looking more into the Artist it seems that he was most active in Haarlem in the Netherlands so its more than likely not the new world after all. I assumed it may have been the new world as the trees looked a little more exotic than european trees.

  8. I thought I'd share some research I have been doing into period clothing.

    While looking at a Dutch Museum I came across this picture painted in 1682 by Thomas Heeremans [Dutch Painter, ca.1640-1697]

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.11.32_025.jpg

    It shows a scene of a port in 1682 (possibly a Dutch settlement in the New World somewhere).

    I have blown up sections of the picture for people to look at with regards to the clothing the sailors are wearing. There seems to be a mixture of short and long jackets and suprisingly most of the waistcoats seem to be short waist length ones rather than the thigh length ones we have come to associate with the era. There is also a mix of different types of hat with very few actual tricorns that I can see. Another interesting thing is the colors of the clothing.

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.12.24_026.jpg

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.13.17_027.jpg

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.13.51_028.jpg

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.14.29_029.jpg

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.14.58_030.jpg

    Snap_2010.01.09-00.16.20_031.jpg

  9. I just found this picture of a russian medical chest from the late 17th century. It's probably not that relevant to pirates and ships but it does show how the bottles were sealed.

    YMB9KX9LKBB_404ITJ3.jpg

    Medicine Chest

    Russia, Late 17th century

    Bone, wood, brass and foil; carved and engraved. 23.5x24.5x23.5 cm

    Source of Entry: State Museum of Ethnography of the Peoples of the USSR, Leningrad. 1941

  10. Yar, but both those examples are very much feminine - not exactly what I guess we're talking about here

    nope, not unless any crew members have particularly dainty hands

    Just done the rounds with Hogarth (well his book) and couldnt find any fingerless gloves in there either. I am sure i have seen fingerless gloves in a painting somewhere but the more i think about it the more i think that may have been from the victorian era.

  11. This is a question, not necessarily an argument: do we have any evidence for GAoP fingerless gloves?

    There's mittens mentioned in the ASC specs, and plenty of gloves with fingers...

    This site seems to have fingerless gloves but they are womens from the 18th century. It doesnt specify when in the 18th century though:

    http://www.history.org/history/clothing/women/wglossary.cfm

    Theres also a couple of fingerless gloves on this page from around the late 17th early 18th Century:

    http://www.glovecollectioncatalogue.org/Spence-Collection-at-Bath-23390-23417

    Obvioulsy neither of these sites have any specific sailors gloves and fingered gloves seem to be more popular.

  12. These are replicas of the gloves worn by a man pulled out of a peat bog in the shetlands dating from the early 18th century

    250px-GunnisterMan_gloves_-_Shetland_Museum_and_Archives_01385.jpg

    Knitted gloves, or rather gauntlets, (replicas) from among Gunnister man finds.

    The gloves are well knitted with sophisticated techniques. They are mainly knitted in stocking stitch, with patterning on the cuffs, and decorative arrows on the back of the hands.

  13. I once saw a photo of several, five or so, fast-draw champions pointing their guns at the camera. All of them reflected the light from the flash off the face of the breech. Don't piss off those guys...

    I'd go for the Clint Eastwood approach in the unforgiven and just go get a blunderbuss biggrin.gif

  14. I hate to tell ye mate, but she's probably a better shot than you: look where the muzzles are pointed. If the breech plug on hers was polished I believe it would have reflected the flash.

    Judging from my attempts at shooting on the Wii over xmas I believe you are right ha ha.

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