my artificer
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Canada

seen from Kosovo

seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Luxembourg

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from Russia
my artificer
Posting this sketch of the Armourer I’m never gonna finish
Beef Lady
Re: Alec Baldwin case. Yes, the armourer was guilty, but the way the female cop (oh so gently) talked her out of getting a lawyer in the initial interrogation said everything.
Armourer girl who knows she’s in deep shit*between sobbs* “I need a lawyer in here, right?”
Female cop: “But, why? We’re just having a friendly conversation. You don’t need a lawyer. You can trust us.”
Armourer, still a stupid, hysterical mess: “I suppose not…”
She then spends the next hour blubbering, blabbing and totally incriminating herself on tape.
She was guilty. She was inept. But this was sickening. There should have been a lawyer there.
this came to me in a dream
a lotta work!
i think i have to finish this in a week and a half to stay on schedule, i think i can do it
this is 5 pairs of spaulders (2 pairs 16th century and 3 pairs early 15th century)
2 gorgets, 17th century
and 2 pairs of pauldrons, 16th century
wish me luck!!
Une paire achevée de pièces d’armure de jambe en acier, réalisée aujourd’hui dans l’atelier MedievalMart.
Chaque élément est découpé, formé et assemblé à la main, puis poli avec soin. L’articulation du genou et de la cheville permet un mouvement naturel tout en conservant une silhouette fidèle aux armures médiévales historiques.
Ces pièces ne sont pas produites en série. Elles sont fabriquées lentement, composant par composant, selon des méthodes traditionnelles d’armurerie, où la précision, l’équilibre et la patience sont essentiels.
Nous aimons partager les travaux achevés de l’atelier MedievalMart, en particulier les réalisations où le temps, le savoir-faire et l’attention portée aux détails sont visibles dans l’acier.
A finished pair of steel sabatons (medieval armoured footwear), completed today in our workshop at MedievalMart Australia.
Each plate is cut, shaped, and riveted by hand. The articulated construction allows natural movement of the foot while maintaining an authentic historical silhouette.
These aren’t mass-produced pieces — they’re crafted slowly, component by component, using traditional armour-making techniques. Precision, balance, and patience are essential.
We enjoy sharing finished work from the MedievalMart Australia workshop, especially pieces where genuine craftsmanship is visible in every line of steel.