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This was very interesting. In my ignorance I was initially surprised that oil paints were not the paint of choice for items like shields, but after a quick search I see that this was not used in Europe until much later. Thank you for sharing.
Really amazing. Started a month ago looking for information and tips to build a authentic shield. And this series is miles above anything I found. So much good tips and infos and the result just blow me away. Especially the artistic approach on this is crazy. And the best I think now to take my time and make something great and don’t rush this project. Thank you!
You are welcome to leave a comment. Please note that I check comments here only randomly, so if you have any queries, you are welcome to get in touch via my patreon: www.patreon.com/Dimicator or send an email. Thank you for your interest.
I was rereading Teophilius Presbyter, because your video sparked my curiosity for historical painting and the desire to test it myself, it turns out that it is mentionning linseed oil specifically and how to make it (in the part on how to paint doors in red)
Excellent! I am building a few shields and bucklers right now. This is very helpful and inspirational. Thank you so much! I am going use this technique to elevate my shields to the next level. Greetings from the Netherlands
This is by far the best sheild construction content on UA-cam! I am planning to a build shortly and I will be following your instruction. I have some ideas to reduce the warping. I do a lot of edge joints.
Hello it’s Philip’s wife, you’ve trained and had classes together. I happened across your video. We’re on Memorial holiday and have time to paint 🎨 our shield 🛡 I was looking at BindRune, yet the image shown is amazing
Hallo kurze frage... ich habe jetzt die tierhaut komplett mit knochen und hautleim auf das holz geklebt... nun beim rand läufts zwar nicht so rund haha. aber naja... jetzt ist der leim nicht wasserfest... und ich hab gemerkt das alleine direkte sonneneinstrahlung ihn schnell wieder gummig macht... hätte ich noch was zum leim beigügen sollen oder reicht die bemalung mit eitempera und leinöl ?
I use Glair in gilding, and I have a half liter jar of Glair in my fridge that is over 4 years old and has not started to smell bad.... even after all of that time. I make a lot of it at one time by purchasing packaged diet egg whites at the grocery store and using them to make my Glair, whipping it with a powered beater.
Quite fascinating. I've looked into egg tempera paint before, but I wasn't aware that it was used by vikings, or on shields (though in hindsight the latter isn't that surprising as it was the standard paint of its day) One of my occasional hobbies is painting instruments, so I was wondering how thick the final paint is? It would probably not be a problem for a guitar or the like, but the idea of painting a bass drum head like a viking shield is very appealing, and I love these colours. Unfortunately, drum heads are especially effected by increased thickness, so I'd likely have to try to imitate it with a synthetic paint that comes out thinner. Thanks for the fascinating video!
Thanks for your interest. Thickness of paint layers depends on how much you thin down the paint and how much you apply. When you look at the sequence which shows my used shield, you can tell that the paint layer is extremely thin. I couldn't measure it.
The Dynna-stone can today be found at the Museum of Cultural History, Oslo. A replica can be seen at Hadeland Folkmuseum, not very far from where the original used to stand.
Thanks for a very interesting video. I've always wondered if the Vikings decorated their shields with colorful designs. In the sagas we find only references to the colors of the shield. Amulets in the form of a shield show us a simple geometric pattern. However, I doubt that people who sought to decorate any of their things with ornaments would have left their shields unpainted. Let's hope that the discovery of the shield from Gnezdovo 2017 will reveal an interesting ornament.
There are a painted fragments of Viking shields from Ballateare and Grimstrup showing patterns, and, of course, there are the yellow and black shields from the Gokstad ship burial.
@@swordandshield As far as I know, the shield from Gnezdovo, Snovid mound is also covered with paint. The question is whether the pattern was ... in any case - a great shield, thank you so much for your work
which saga was it that I read where the two warriors were to have a "duel" and they brought Multiple shields for the event.... and I'm sure they weren't all highly decorated nor did they last long (hence the need for multiple shields) it seems to me that, in some cases at the very least, shields were "mass produced" (in dark ages terms) and probably not decorated nor exactingly manufactured
Hello Roland, I'm new to your chanal and what you do is amazing! I started reanectment a few months ago and until now I'm getting it well. Unfortunately I'm left handed and so I can't find some good historical sources. Could please make a vidio about how people could have fought in the early medieval time or was it even possible? Great Work! ~Richard
Thank you for your kind words. I am delighted that you find my work useful. There is a minority of swords that were optimized for sinistral use, so apparently, left-handed sword-fighting was a historical reality, irrespective of period. Here is a video about left versus right: ua-cam.com/video/6zCgvw4u2Kg/v-deo.html Find out more about left-handed swords by browsing my public Patreon posts: www.patreon.com/Dimicator/posts
Your shield looking realy nice and the Ringlerike decoration ad to it a lot. The vry time consuming making and decorating process mkes it, to my opinion, to a more high statul object for a profesional worrior or a jarl, for a normal guy who take part on a raid or is part of a contingent it seems to be to much. Nevertheless it is a beauty. I use a very light and mobil shield as well but not as light as yours. It seems a good idea to give it a try. In a previous video you said that there is no evidence of linen fabric as front material. As far As I read there is no evidence for nerly any material than wood but parchment as well as linen seems to be logic. Specialy linen ad a lot of strength with rather low waight and is way easier to work with. For excample it is not so problematic with humidity. On jurney with a boat or on land there is more or less no chance to keep it dry. kind regards from Westerwald region. p.s. If you have the chance for visiting Miklagard, try out a hand weavery close to Hagia Sophia. When you go from Hagia Sophia to Gülhane park it is on the right. I took some handmade raw silk fabric with white and red stripes for a baggy trousers 😁 6 years ago.
I definitely made my shield too thick, mainly because it is my first time and I could only buy some plywood. I tried my best to make it look as accurate as possible and cover up the inaccuracies so hopefully it turns out alright xD
Same binding agent. Brightness of white is largely determined by the kind of pigment you use. At any rate too bright a white looks odd on a shield, in my opinion.
Hi sword people! Would you like to receive weekly up-dates on weapons research, sword-fighting, living history and more straight into your inbox? To read previous newsletters and to sign up, go here: exciting-pioneer-6049.ck.page/a8f72e8432
The more worn it gets, the more authentic it looks! Excellent!
This was very interesting. In my ignorance I was initially surprised that oil paints were not the paint of choice for items like shields, but after a quick search I see that this was not used in Europe until much later. Thank you for sharing.
I love these instructional videos!
Really amazing. Started a month ago looking for information and tips to build a authentic shield. And this series is miles above anything I found. So much good tips and infos and the result just blow me away. Especially the artistic approach on this is crazy. And the best I think now to take my time and make something great and don’t rush this project. Thank you!
You are welcome to leave a comment. Please note that I check comments here only randomly, so if you have any queries, you are welcome to get in touch via my patreon: www.patreon.com/Dimicator or send an email. Thank you for your interest.
Love your work. I'll have to try to make a shield for myself some day. That shield of yours came out looking amazing.
I was rereading Teophilius Presbyter, because your video sparked my curiosity for historical painting and the desire to test it myself, it turns out that it is mentionning linseed oil specifically and how to make it (in the part on how to paint doors in red)
This is a great source.
Excellent! I am building a few shields and bucklers right now. This is very helpful and inspirational. Thank you so much! I am going use this technique to elevate my shields to the next level.
Greetings from the Netherlands
This is by far the best sheild construction content on UA-cam! I am planning to a build shortly and I will be following your instruction. I have some ideas to reduce the warping. I do a lot of edge joints.
You couldn't have picked a better time. I'm planning another shield project soon.
Hello it’s Philip’s wife, you’ve trained and had classes together. I happened across your video. We’re on Memorial holiday and have time to paint 🎨 our shield 🛡
I was looking at BindRune, yet the image shown is amazing
well done look sick
Had to share this with my viking group! Thank you!
Gestern noch in haithabu gesehen das Schild. Es sieht noch echt super aus und ist auch weiterhin ein Kunstwerk
Hahaha. Freut mich. nebenbei bemerkt: Es heisst DER Schild, wenn es um den Kampfschild. Sorry, konnte ich mir nicht verkneifen.
Thanks for this interesting tutorial.
You are welcome.
insanely Beautiful
Pretty brave Roland. The good Tupperware.
Excellent content!
This video is just so, so, very good.
That was excellent. Thank you.
My pleasure.
Hallo kurze frage... ich habe jetzt die tierhaut komplett mit knochen und hautleim auf das holz geklebt... nun beim rand läufts zwar nicht so rund haha. aber naja... jetzt ist der leim nicht wasserfest... und ich hab gemerkt das alleine direkte sonneneinstrahlung ihn schnell wieder gummig macht... hätte ich noch was zum leim beigügen sollen oder reicht die bemalung mit eitempera und leinöl ?
How long will I have to wait for the varnish on the colour of the viking shield to dry?
any idea on what grounding to use for a metal helmet? gesso there too?
I use Glair in gilding, and I have a half liter jar of Glair in my fridge that is over 4 years old and has not started to smell bad.... even after all of that time. I make a lot of it at one time by purchasing packaged diet egg whites at the grocery store and using them to make my Glair, whipping it with a powered beater.
Ah there it is finally! Was it here before and was it deleted or what happened? Either way I’m glad the series about the shield is now complete!
In fact, the part of making the edge clamps is still missing.
Quite fascinating. I've looked into egg tempera paint before, but I wasn't aware that it was used by vikings, or on shields (though in hindsight the latter isn't that surprising as it was the standard paint of its day)
One of my occasional hobbies is painting instruments, so I was wondering how thick the final paint is? It would probably not be a problem for a guitar or the like, but the idea of painting a bass drum head like a viking shield is very appealing, and I love these colours. Unfortunately, drum heads are especially effected by increased thickness, so I'd likely have to try to imitate it with a synthetic paint that comes out thinner.
Thanks for the fascinating video!
Thanks for your interest. Thickness of paint layers depends on how much you thin down the paint and how much you apply. When you look at the sequence which shows my used shield, you can tell that the paint layer is extremely thin. I couldn't measure it.
The Dynna-stone can today be found at the Museum of Cultural History, Oslo. A replica can be seen at Hadeland Folkmuseum, not very far from where the original used to stand.
Fascinating series, Roland. When did you walk the Camino?
Merci infiniment pour ce document j'adore tes vidéos
Mais, c'est avec plaisir !
Thanks for a very interesting video.
I've always wondered if the Vikings decorated their shields with colorful designs. In the sagas we find only references to the colors of the shield. Amulets in the form of a shield show us a simple geometric pattern. However, I doubt that people who sought to decorate any of their things with ornaments would have left their shields unpainted. Let's hope that the discovery of the shield from Gnezdovo 2017 will reveal an interesting ornament.
There are a painted fragments of Viking shields from Ballateare and Grimstrup showing patterns, and, of course, there are the yellow and black shields from the Gokstad ship burial.
@@swordandshield As far as I know, the shield from Gnezdovo, Snovid mound is also covered with paint. The question is whether the pattern was ...
in any case - a great shield, thank you so much for your work
which saga was it that I read where the two warriors were to have a "duel" and they brought Multiple shields for the event....
and I'm sure they weren't all highly decorated
nor did they last long (hence the need for multiple shields)
it seems to me that, in some cases at the very least, shields were "mass produced" (in dark ages terms) and probably not decorated nor exactingly manufactured
Hello Roland,
I'm new to your chanal and what you do is amazing!
I started reanectment a few months ago and until now I'm getting it well.
Unfortunately I'm left handed and so I can't find some good historical sources.
Could please make a vidio about how people could have fought in the early medieval time or was it even possible?
Great Work!
~Richard
Thank you for your kind words. I am delighted that you find my work useful. There is a minority of swords that were optimized for sinistral use, so apparently, left-handed sword-fighting was a historical reality, irrespective of period. Here is a video about left versus right: ua-cam.com/video/6zCgvw4u2Kg/v-deo.html Find out more about left-handed swords by browsing my public Patreon posts: www.patreon.com/Dimicator/posts
Your shield looking realy nice and the Ringlerike decoration ad to it a lot. The vry time consuming making and decorating process mkes it, to my opinion, to a more high statul object for a profesional worrior or a jarl, for a normal guy who take part on a raid or is part of a contingent it seems to be to much. Nevertheless it is a beauty. I use a very light and mobil shield as well but not as light as yours. It seems a good idea to give it a try.
In a previous video you said that there is no evidence of linen fabric as front material. As far As I read there is no evidence for nerly any material than wood but parchment as well as linen seems to be logic. Specialy linen ad a lot of strength with rather low waight and is way easier to work with. For excample it is not so problematic with humidity. On jurney with a boat or on land there is more or less no chance to keep it dry.
kind regards from Westerwald region.
p.s. If you have the chance for visiting Miklagard, try out a hand weavery close to Hagia Sophia. When you go from Hagia Sophia to Gülhane park it is on the right. I took some handmade raw silk fabric with white and red stripes for a baggy trousers 😁 6 years ago.
I definitely made my shield too thick, mainly because it is my first time and I could only buy some plywood. I tried my best to make it look as accurate as possible and cover up the inaccuracies so hopefully it turns out alright xD
For the white, do you also use the yolk? or the other part of the egg?
Same binding agent. Brightness of white is largely determined by the kind of pigment you use. At any rate too bright a white looks odd on a shield, in my opinion.
Question out of the blue!
How would one strap a war hammer, a mace or an axe to one's hip without jeopardizing quick access?
Does the egg not rot as paint?
Is there a playlist for the later medieval shield?
What do you mean by 'later viking shield'? ua-cam.com/play/PL_hVs5MjWFV1IwpWIBswZr1pRq-qcpMIA.html
Wunderschön
👍🏻
⚔
okay now for a video for forging an ulfberht the way the vikings did lol
4:10