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'Almain' collar, for light field use

Image attached to HEN.M.126-1933

An image of Armour. 'Almain' collar, for light field use, lacking its integral spaudlers. Unknown production, Germany. Formed of three upward-overlapping lames front and rear. The front lames are medially ridged. The upper edges of the second and third front lames are each decorated at their centres with a filed ogee. The upper edge of the top lame at both the front and rear has a boldly roped inward turn. The bottom lame in each instance is considerably deeper than the rest. The lower edge has a roped inward turn accompanied by a recessed border and an enclosing raised rib. The lower edge of the front lame is obtusely pointed while the lower edge of the rear lame is almost straight. The lames were originally connected to one another by three lames front and rear. Each leather was retained by single rivets which were externally flush on the first and second lames and round-headed with internal washers on the third lame. Construction-holes aligning with the rivet-holes for the outer leathers of the second and third lames were originally filled with purely decorative round-headed rivets. These construction-holes and the underlying leathering-holes are now filled by modern round-headed rivets that secure the lames directly to one another at their outer ends. The unused outer leathering-holes on the fourth lame now remain vacant, as do all the central leathering-holes. The central hole in the first rear lame has been modified to a vertical slot which has broken out to the lower edge of the lame. A later hole located just to the right of the slot is plugged with an externally-flush rivet. The front and rear sections of the collar are connected to one another at the top of the left side by means of an integral hinge cut out of the ends of the first lames. The inward-folded ends of the hinge are each secured by an externally-flush rivet. That in the rear lame has lost its head. The pivot of the hinge has been replaced by a long piece of wire bent over the top edge of the collar. The f

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Armour. 'Almain' collar, for light field use, lacking its integral spaudlers. Unknown production, Germany. Formed of three upward-overlapping lames front and rear. The front lames are medially ridged. The upper edges of the second and third front lames are each decorated at their centres with a filed ogee. The upper edge of the top lame at both the front and rear has a boldly roped inward turn. The bottom lame in each instance is considerably deeper than the rest. The lower edge has a roped inward turn accompanied by a recessed border and an enclosing raised rib. The lower edge of the front lame is obtusely pointed while the lower edge of the rear lame is almost straight. The lames were originally connected to one another by three lames front and rear. Each leather was retained by single rivets which were externally flush on the first and second lames and round-headed with internal washers on the third lame. Construction-holes aligning with the rivet-holes for the outer leathers of the second and third lames were originally filled with purely decorative round-headed rivets. These construction-holes and the underlying leathering-holes are now filled by modern round-headed rivets that secure the lames directly to one another at their outer ends. The unused outer leathering-holes on the fourth lame now remain vacant, as do all the central leathering-holes. The central hole in the first rear lame has been modified to a vertical slot which has broken out to the lower edge of the lame. A later hole located just to the right of the slot is plugged with an externally-flush rivet. The front and rear sections of the collar are connected to one another at the top of the left side by means of an integral hinge cut out of the ends of the first lames. The inward-folded ends of the hinge are each secured by an externally-flush rivet. That in the rear lame has lost its head. The pivot of the hinge has been replaced by a long piece of wire bent over the top edge of the collar. The f

Image data

  • Accession Number: HEN.M.126-1933
  • Photograph copyright © The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
  • Aperture: f/45.0
  • Focal length: 120
  • Camera: Hasselblad H3DII-31
  • Photographer name: Sam Cole
  • Image height: 768 pixels
  • Image width: 1024 pixels
  • Processed with: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5.0 (Windows)
  • Filesize: 147.83kB
  • Exposure time: 1/125
  • ISO Speed: 100
  • Fnumber: 45/1

Key words

16th Century almain collar armour collar competition etched etching Fitz_AA German hammered hinged hinges metalwork mottled patina patinated patination Renaissance riveted rivets steel tournament tourney

Colours in this image

rgb(220,220,222), rgb(76,70,65), rgb(133,130,126), rgb(103,99,100), rgb(107,108,103), rgb(174,172,169), rgb(157,155,156), rgb(109,108,92), rgb(116,100,92), rgb(156,164,158), rgb(180,183,188)

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The Fitzwilliam Museum (2024) "'Almain' collar, for light field use" Web page available at: https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/image/media-3618127346 Accessed: 2024-11-08 22:13:51

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{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/image/media-3618127346 |title='Almain' collar, for light field use |author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-11-08 22:13:51|publisher=The University of Cambridge}}

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<div class="text-center">
    <figure class="figure">
        <img src="https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/imagestore/aa/aa40/large_HEN_M_126_1933_1_201705_sjc288_dc2.jpg"
        alt="Collar"
        class="img-fluid" />
        <figcaption class="figure-caption text-info">'Almain' collar, for light field use</figcaption>
    </figure>
</div>
    

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