XaiJu
lastswordminiatures
lastswordminiatures

patreon


The Adventurer: Frydmen

In historical miniatures, especially from the ancient period, they often suffer from excessive simplicity, and the miniatures end up looking too uniform, when in fact it’s a period that, due to the handcrafted nature of garments, should be rich in details.

In the Viking range, we are doing a lot of research on how cloaks could be fastened and the different ways belts were used, in order to give even the simplest miniatures, like the militia, interesting details to paint and a certain uniqueness

The Adventurer: Frydmen

Comments

Thank you very much, Mark K. I had already read something similar before. In this case, the belt also holds an aesthetic value. On one hand, we make them wider than they should be to help emphasize the proportions of the miniature. The additional length also has value due to the weight and pendulum effect it creates. It can greatly help relatively static miniatures achieve a sense of movement. It's one of those elements that always presents us with the dilemma of how faithful we want to be...

Last Sword Miniatures

https://sagy.vikingove.cz/en/the-length-of-early-medieval-belts/

Mark K.

Oh and belts were worn shorter… no belt knots… in most cases in situ findings suggest a distance between buckle and belt-tip from roundabout 20cm… I can highly recommend projekt forlog‘s article about viking age belt legths. All in all this isn’t important for well and cool sculpted minis🫶

Mark K.

Nice to hear you’re doing that much research. I‘m doing museal recreation since 10 years especially for the Viking age. Cloaks worn tight around the upper body are very common indeed. That usage of three belts honestly isn’t… You normally find several buckles only in that case. When one is worn as a shoulderbelt for the sword-sheath… I‘m very curious how they will turn out finally

Mark K.

You guys are amazing. Thank you for bringing these sculpts into existence. The research based detail is fantastic. I really hope you complete the post-Roman / pre-Norman Britain line.

Cristian Cooney


More Creators