Areas in the Crossbow Shop - Traveling within the World2024-03-28T23:00:00Zhttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/forum/topics/areas-in-the-crossbow-shop?groupUrl=ironangelforge&commentId=2185477%3AComment%3A78017&x=1&feed=yes&xn_auth=noOther accessories
Coming soo…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780172010-11-24T02:32:24.278ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
Other accessories<br />
<br />
Coming soon!<br />
<br />
All content, images and such, Copyright 2002 J. P. W. Griswold. Last page update 30 January, Y2K+2<br />
Several thing are built in the IronAngel woodshop, in the rear of the Forge building. Clicking on the links below will take you to the area corrosponding.<br />
Crossbows - Chests and Boxes - Furniture
Other accessories<br />
<br />
Coming soon!<br />
<br />
All content, images and such, Copyright 2002 J. P. W. Griswold. Last page update 30 January, Y2K+2<br />
Several thing are built in the IronAngel woodshop, in the rear of the Forge building. Clicking on the links below will take you to the area corrosponding.<br />
Crossbows - Chests and Boxes - Furniture Bolts or Quarrels
Bolts (or Q…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780162010-11-24T02:32:02.915ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
Bolts or Quarrels<br />
Bolts (or Quarrels) are now avaiable!<br />
We offer a bakers dozen (13) bolts with 100 grain steel points, fletched in our choice of colors for $25+shipping (US funds). We will attempt to accomodate special color requests, but may not be able to fill all color requests at this time. We will let you know if we do or do not have the colors you request avaiable if you provide a vaild e-mail address for us to respond to.<br />
Bolt shaft colors avaiable are:<br />
Bleached White, Dark Red Oak, and…
Bolts or Quarrels<br />
Bolts (or Quarrels) are now avaiable!<br />
We offer a bakers dozen (13) bolts with 100 grain steel points, fletched in our choice of colors for $25+shipping (US funds). We will attempt to accomodate special color requests, but may not be able to fill all color requests at this time. We will let you know if we do or do not have the colors you request avaiable if you provide a vaild e-mail address for us to respond to.<br />
Bolt shaft colors avaiable are:<br />
Bleached White, Dark Red Oak, and Ebony.<br />
Current fletching (feather) colors include:<br />
Black, Purple, Red, Yellow.<br />
Other fletching colors will be added soon. Crossbow Strings
In the above…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780152010-11-24T02:31:41.235ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
Crossbow Strings<br />
In the above two images, you will see a close up shot of the end of one of our standard crossbow strings, and a shot of three strings laid out. In the image of the three strings only about three fifths of the string is shown, from the end to just beyond the center serving.<br />
String A is our standard string, made of tan B-50 Dacron with dark brown serving and ends. These standard strings are made for our crossbows up to 100lbs draw.<br />
String B is our heavy, period style string, also…
Crossbow Strings<br />
In the above two images, you will see a close up shot of the end of one of our standard crossbow strings, and a shot of three strings laid out. In the image of the three strings only about three fifths of the string is shown, from the end to just beyond the center serving.<br />
String A is our standard string, made of tan B-50 Dacron with dark brown serving and ends. These standard strings are made for our crossbows up to 100lbs draw.<br />
String B is our heavy, period style string, also made of tan B-50 Dacron with dark brown serving and ends. (In the above image, the string is shown with our discontinued tan end binding - we no longer do this style, as the new bindings look and perform better.) These strings have heavier skeins, making them both stronger, and look more like the strings seen on period crossbows. We suggest these strings from 75lbs-175lbs, and they can be made even stronger upon request.<br />
String C is our new colored, standard style string. Here it is shown in red B-50 Dacron, with serving and bindings done in black. Other colors will soon be added to the site, although some color combinations will not be available, as B-50 is produced in a limited spectrum at this time. You may e-mail us for quotes on special color combinations.<br />
Costs for the strings (which includes shipping):<br />
Style A - Tan with Dark Brown serving and ends. $7.50 e.<br />
Style B - Tan and Dk Brown, period style. $12.00 e.<br />
Style C - Color standard strings (only Red and Black is avaiable at this time). $10.00 e. Feast (or Mini-, or baby-) Cr…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780142010-11-24T02:31:18.133ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
Feast (or Mini-, or baby-) Crossbows<br />
<br />
"Feast Bows"are miniture, notch lock, 4E's in most details. They have a standard notch lock, a bound in steel prod which has about a 5lb draw, and are made to shoot mini-marshmallows, grapes and such. Most of them are oak, but a few are made in beech, maple and on very rare occasions, american black walnut (which is a special order). All feast crossbows are finished with a hand rubbed oil finish to bring out the grain of the wood, and protect them for many…
Feast (or Mini-, or baby-) Crossbows<br />
<br />
"Feast Bows"are miniture, notch lock, 4E's in most details. They have a standard notch lock, a bound in steel prod which has about a 5lb draw, and are made to shoot mini-marshmallows, grapes and such. Most of them are oak, but a few are made in beech, maple and on very rare occasions, american black walnut (which is a special order). All feast crossbows are finished with a hand rubbed oil finish to bring out the grain of the wood, and protect them for many years.<br />
We STONGLY recommend NOT shooting anything hard or dangerous out of these! During the 15th C. in the courts of Italy, these very crossbows were banned, as the courtiers were shooting nuts about and injuring the ladies of the court. Not wise when one could loose their head for such tomfoolery.<br />
Our Feast Crossbows can be ordered by sending us e-mail from this page. Click on the link below, your email program will open and you can send us a note telling us you want one (or three, or twelve...). There will be a quiz though... You will have to send us your shipping address, name, zip code and such. We will send you confirmation that we have them in stock, or when we can build your feast bows for you. Of course, you will have to send along a valid e-return address for confirmation. Then we box up your feast crossbows, and ship them to you when your check or money order arrives!<br />
Each feast crossbow is $20.00 (US), cash, good check or money order, plus actual shipping costs per crossbow, in the continental US.<br />
Sorry, we can not at this time accept credit cards.<br />
Please note that this is a price increase, effective 15 July 2001 for both the cost of the bow and shipping. We simply could not keep selling the mini-bows at 1996 prices any longer... It saddens us to have to raise the price, but we feel that the quality, finish and range have all increased substantially since 1996, which more than offsets the cost increase. We thank you for understanding.<br />
E-Mail Us!<br />
Or you can do it via the courier system (that is, the Mail) by sending us your name, address (with zip code!) and a check to:<br />
109 Union St.<br />
Hart, MI. 49420<br />
Make checks payable to: J. P. W. Griswold. Crossbows for Middle Ages Com…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780132010-11-24T02:30:54.289ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
Crossbows for Middle Ages Combat Recreation Games<br />
<br />
This is a Pattern I build for use in Middle Ages combat reenactment games, such as the SCA plays.<br />
<br />
It is based closely on a Spanish Slurbow, with minor modifications to stock shape to better mesh with the much wider upper tube required for this crossbows projectiles. The stock is basicly a short, simplified 4E, as above. For an example of a slurbow, see Payne-Gallway, p.129, fig. 84.<br />
<br />
Instead of a quarrel, as a normal crossbow fires, or a ball…
Crossbows for Middle Ages Combat Recreation Games<br />
<br />
This is a Pattern I build for use in Middle Ages combat reenactment games, such as the SCA plays.<br />
<br />
It is based closely on a Spanish Slurbow, with minor modifications to stock shape to better mesh with the much wider upper tube required for this crossbows projectiles. The stock is basicly a short, simplified 4E, as above. For an example of a slurbow, see Payne-Gallway, p.129, fig. 84.<br />
<br />
Instead of a quarrel, as a normal crossbow fires, or a ball as a slurbow fires, it fires a projectile built of a plastic golf bag liner tube tipped with a tennis ball to about 40m. These are often described as "Missiles that OOZE through the air...", they are slow and somewhat unstable, though quite safe to be struck by, delivering a sound thump. My 'bow is the most accurate and usable combat crossbow firing these projectiles I have ever seen. These missiles are acceptable in all regions of the SCA, although many locations allow lower draw weight bows and crossbows to fire special, safe "stick" missiles build on normal fiberglass arrow shafts.<br />
<br />
If you are playing in the SCA, or an equivalent group, and are not allowed "stick" arrows, then this is the crossbow for you. It shoots upsided down, on its side or steeply downhill without the quarrel falling from the track. You can run with it and not loose your quarrel, allowing "run and gun" tatics. It is designed to be loaded by a person in full gauntlets, with the crossbow setting against the hip as it is cocked, and can easily be loaded without looking at the bow. This allows the shooter to look around for targets, and prevents being blindsided as one is loading their weapon.<br />
<br />
Sounds too good to be true? It is not! I have spent 3 years developing this pattern to the fullest extent. With the crossbow loaded, the shooters hand holds the stock, using the hand as a wedge saftey to prevent accidental misfires into the backs of ones own forces. The lock is a simple notch type, which resists fouling from battlefield crud and cocks much quicker than a rolling nut type of crossbow. Yes, the notch is not as accurate as a rolling nut on stick arrows... With golf tube arrows, the projectile is such that the 5% decrease in accuracy is not even a factor. I can shoot anyone I choose, square in the face out to about 35' with a 90% chance of hitting a 4" circle. And I don't practice, by the way. The stock is short enough to get the crossbow out in front of your helmet and sight it like a rifle.<br />
<br />
The book, "On Constructing Iain's Combat Crossbow" is being worked on for it's Second Edition, and should be avaiable soon.<br />
<br />
I wrote the book specficly to build the above crossbow, but much of the information applies to building standard (arrow shooting) crossbows as well. It is geared toward someone who has a little woodworking experience, with explicit instrucions for those who have only a little bit of experience!<br />
<br />
If you wish to order the book, it is $10.00 american, shipping included anywhere on the North American continent. Drop a note or e-mail for shipping anywhere else. Our mailing address and eletronic address is:<br />
109 Union st.<br />
Hart, Michigan USA 49420<br />
e-mail: iain@ironangel.com The Type 6
The Type 6 has lo…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780122010-11-24T02:30:30.710ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
The Type 6<br />
<br />
The Type 6 has long, flowing lines and a large size. They are common on the Continent from the 1400's on. Many have survived the ages and are currently on display in muesems all over the world.<br />
<br />
The Type 6 is a decendant of the Type 1, with a more hollowed out area on the bottom of the stock behind the bindings and in front of the lock. Also in this family of crossbows are (not pictured) the Type 5 and Type 7. The Type 5 is the crossbow most commonly seen in collections and muesems,…
The Type 6<br />
<br />
The Type 6 has long, flowing lines and a large size. They are common on the Continent from the 1400's on. Many have survived the ages and are currently on display in muesems all over the world.<br />
<br />
The Type 6 is a decendant of the Type 1, with a more hollowed out area on the bottom of the stock behind the bindings and in front of the lock. Also in this family of crossbows are (not pictured) the Type 5 and Type 7. The Type 5 is the crossbow most commonly seen in collections and muesems, as these short stocky crossbows are often very ornate and are easy to use from horse back whilst hunting. The 4E - Flemmish Arbalest
T…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780112010-11-24T02:29:47.850ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
The 4E - Flemmish Arbalest<br />
<br />
The Flemish Arbalest (4E) is a commonly appearing 'bow in manuscript illuminations and paintings. It is a large, blocky crossbow designed as a military weapon. They tend to be simple, unlike the ornamental hunting bows seen in most muesem collections.<br />
<br />
Sir Ralph Payne-Gallwey's book, "The Crossbow" (Dover 0-486-28720-3, $17.95 us.) features this crossbow prominently. Note that many of the 4E's I have seen are fitted with Bow Irons to hold the prod in place, not Bound…
The 4E - Flemmish Arbalest<br />
<br />
The Flemish Arbalest (4E) is a commonly appearing 'bow in manuscript illuminations and paintings. It is a large, blocky crossbow designed as a military weapon. They tend to be simple, unlike the ornamental hunting bows seen in most muesem collections.<br />
<br />
Sir Ralph Payne-Gallwey's book, "The Crossbow" (Dover 0-486-28720-3, $17.95 us.) features this crossbow prominently. Note that many of the 4E's I have seen are fitted with Bow Irons to hold the prod in place, not Bound In as in the upper photo.<br />
<br />
This particular crossbow's stock is usually about 32" long, made of red oak with a walnut top deck. It has a 75lb draw steel "Gladius" prod The Type 3 - Itailian Crossbo…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780102010-11-24T02:29:27.575ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
The Type 3 - Itailian Crossbow<br />
<br />
The Itailian type 3 is built on the style of many large crossbows that survive in muesems and private collections. The normal type 3 is fairly long,
The Type 3 - Itailian Crossbow<br />
<br />
The Itailian type 3 is built on the style of many large crossbows that survive in muesems and private collections. The normal type 3 is fairly long, The 2C
This is a very common…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780092010-11-24T02:29:07.679ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
The 2C<br />
<br />
This is a very common crossbow shape, appearing in a great number of illustrations, miniatures and paintings. Several survive in muesems, although they are often overlooked next to the much more ornate hunting crossbows. These crossbows (along with the 4E below) seem to have been extremely common for military usage in the High Middle Ages, and are quite popular with re-enactors and collectors.<br />
<br />
The Type 2C has flat sides with gently tapering tillers, and tend to be about 30" to 32"…
The 2C<br />
<br />
This is a very common crossbow shape, appearing in a great number of illustrations, miniatures and paintings. Several survive in muesems, although they are often overlooked next to the much more ornate hunting crossbows. These crossbows (along with the 4E below) seem to have been extremely common for military usage in the High Middle Ages, and are quite popular with re-enactors and collectors.<br />
<br />
The Type 2C has flat sides with gently tapering tillers, and tend to be about 30" to 32" long.<br />
<br />
Options can include a top overlay of different woods, metal or wood side plates with a rolling nut lock, sights and more. I have yet to see any evidence of the 2C being built as a notch lock, and indeed the stock shape almost precludes the normal trigger system generally seen with the notch lock. Therefore, we do not build the 2C as a notch lock (rolling nut lock only at this time).<br />
<br />
The 2C shown above is American black walnut, with all black steel hardware and bow irons. It has a steel prod, with a draw weight of about 75lbs.<br />
As it is equipped, the cost is $325+shipping (US funds). The Type 1 Crossbow
The Type…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2010-11-24:2185477:Comment:780082010-11-24T02:28:43.707ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttps://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
The Type 1 Crossbow<br />
<br />
The Type 1 Crossbow stock is a relatively simple, tapered stick. It seems to have appeared somewhen prior to the 9th Century C.E. somewhere in continental Europe. This is the crossbow that William the Bastard (later known as William the Conqueror) brought with him to England in 1066 (along with quite a number of short hand bows). It is this very bow that will eventually evolve into the very ornate hunting crossbows of the 15th, 16th and 17th Centuries, though it will be…
The Type 1 Crossbow<br />
<br />
The Type 1 Crossbow stock is a relatively simple, tapered stick. It seems to have appeared somewhen prior to the 9th Century C.E. somewhere in continental Europe. This is the crossbow that William the Bastard (later known as William the Conqueror) brought with him to England in 1066 (along with quite a number of short hand bows). It is this very bow that will eventually evolve into the very ornate hunting crossbows of the 15th, 16th and 17th Centuries, though it will be heavily altered.<br />
<br />
Prod mountings can be either bound in or bow irons, and the lock could easily be either a notch lock or a rolling nut lock. If the lock is a notch lock, the prod should be bound in, not mounted with bow irons, if one is trying to stay authentic. The crossbow illustrated above is an ash type 1, with a notch lock and an bound in prod.<br />
<br />
The Type 1 can be shaped in a number of subtle variations; flat sided and somewhat blocky, octagonal, or with a flat top and a rounded belly.<br />
<br />
Other options can include a top overlay of different woods, metal or wood side plates with a rolling nut lock, sights and more.