Thursday, 22 February 2018

Bobble Hat

I've had this factory knitted bobble hat a while but it remained tucked away in a drawer, I have plenty of hats but my woollen beanie hat of choice remains one hand knitted (see here) for me not only because of the personal effort but it's much more comfortable to wear. 


Today I have taken the hat out the drawer and as the late February cold snap hits the UK I intend to wear it at least once while scraping frost off the car windscreen.


Union Jack fact - the Jack is small flag flown from bow of ships, the union jack flag was originally called the Flag of Britain which represented the union of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1606, but possibly because it was initially only flown by the British navy as the small flag on the bow the nickname stuck when it was eventually adopted by land forces and as a national emblem.



Sunday, 18 February 2018

Arabian Barbute


Now I'm not sure this helmet as a real historical equivalent at all, although did find a few images of turbans wrapped around helmets.

Its open faced barbute in style, made from plastic with a plastic ring around the crown to give a turban style Arabic look and then painted.


The helm was found within a batch of theatre kit, unlabelled or marked so who knows what it was used for.


Now its part of larp kit.


Sunday, 11 February 2018

Saracen MkII

From the same batch of helms as the last post all picked up at bring and buy kit fair.








Sunday, 4 February 2018

Arabic Helm

This lookalike Persian/Arabic/Saracen style helmet is made from fibreglass and has string mail around its rim, it's about cheap a lookalike as you can get before you go into toy helmets but is ok for lrp and theatre where its the impression you need not accuracy or actual protection.



Tuesday, 30 January 2018

Czapka


This helmet called a Czapka is in style used typically by 19th C Royal Russian, German and the Polish Uhlan Cavalry Regiments.

Made of pressed leather.


The Czapka origins lie in the very late 18th Century when a square-topped (4 pointed) Shako was used by Austrians infantry. 


Czapka is Belorussian words translate to English simply as a cap.








The helmet in the shape shown here was adapted by various cavalry regiments after the Napoleonic wars, mainly those of Poland, Russian, Prussia, Germany and Austria. Although the British and French did have a version for some of their cavalry regiments without the square top.


The helmet continued to be used by Cavalry regiments right up to first few weeks of world war one, before becoming a helm just used for parade grounds only.


This is a theatrical quality copy, not reenactment copy.

Monday, 22 January 2018

Shako

This leather shako is part of our crew kit


I have no idea if its a reproduction of genuine helmet or just something made for the theatre.

It's solidly made with a steel badge so could be a re-enactment helm, but the elastic headband and overall finish make me believe it is from a theatre production, where close up inspection does not occur.


2 years ago above

below is today after losing 5 stone







Monday, 15 January 2018

Today is National Hat Day


The national hat day celebrates the Hat

In the UK is another hat day the "Wear a Hat Day" on Thursday 29th of March in aid of brain tumour research. 

Saturday, 13 January 2018

General Plumage


This Shako hat is another theatrical hat


A Shako is a tall cylindrical military hat with a visor, the cylinder can be parallel or tapered in or out at the top.  
They are usually decorated with plumes and a plate or badge on the front of the cylinder.


The Shako was popular in the 19th Century, initially, it was a practical improvement on the military hats of the time offering a little bit of protection, but by the end of the Napoleonic wars, it became a showy parade ground hat.
In the UK a stovepipe version of the hat was first worn by military units from around 1799 but by the mid 1820's it's importance to show off the unit took over from its practicality, attempts were made in the mid-century to return it to practical use, but by 1870 it was no longer considered for actual battlefield use at all and in the UK by 1905 it was no longer worn by units for any use.


Some countries continue to use Shako for their showy military parades even today.


This hat comes from a theatrical production and is not a reproduction of an actual Shako worn by soldiers.