Showing posts with label heraldry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heraldry. Show all posts

09 August 2025

SCA: Goofy Little Tent Flag

 Last month I showed you my new heraldry which was passed in June: 


I used to have a little cloth flag that I would put up in front of my tent to say, "this is my tent," but since I changed my heraldry this summer, I needed a new flag. 

Rather than try to replicate the entire device on a 12x14" flag, I decided to make one of those little "weathervane" style flags like you see on Norse banner poles (like this).  (No, it doesn’t look remotely Norse now that it’s finished). 

There's a blue background and a gold pomegranate on one side: 




And a black raven rising on the other side: 




(If you're curious, the cloth is white cotton sheeting; and the paints I used are plain old artists' acrylic paints mixed with a little bit of Tacky Glue and some liquid matte medium. The glue keeps the colors from running in the rain, and the matte medium is just to water down the paint and make the finish the same across the different colors).  

Just a small fun project which will absolutely NOT make up for the fact that I have a big, blue, modern tent, LOL.  (I would love to build myself a real Viking tent, but I don't have the time or the money, or the space in my workshop to do all that carving!) 

18 July 2025

SCA: About Hrefna

I'm in the process of creating an SCA resume with the guidance of a Laurel friend of mine, and it occurred to me that I haven't done any sort of introductory thing on this blog in a pretty long time.  So here goes: 


ME

I am Honorable Lady Hrefna Hroksdottir, and I play a 9th-century Norsewoman in the SCA, in the barony of Bryn Gwlad in the kingdom of Ansteorra. I currently hold an Award of Arms (2011) Sable Thistle (an armigerous award for arts & sciences in Ansteorra, 2015) in costuming, as well as an Iris of Merit (grant level A&S award, 2025).    



BACKGROUND AND INTERESTS

I've been sewing since I was 9 years old when my mother first taught me, and I've been costuming since I was 18 when I was in Amtgard (Barony of Tori-Mar, Celestial Kingdom).  I very much enjoy all things sewing, especially hand sewing. I'm also an avid tablet weaver, and I do a bit of woodworking, jewelry making, and making glass beads.  

I dance when I can, and I try not to let people hear me sing although I love doing it and really enjoy the bardic circle when I can make it to one.  I also cook quite a bit, although that was sort of an unintentional side-hobby - I help out the Ansteorran Longship Association with their omelet breakfast fundraisers when I can, and I've helped my friend Cristiane make feasts for events on a few occasions, too.  

I don't teach formal classes at all, although I wish I could.  I actually love teaching, but I have some pretty serious anxiety issues which make the act of standing in front of a group of people and speaking to them impossible for me.  I do, however, really enjoy teaching one-on-one, and I've done that pretty frequently.  I'd much rather come to your house to teach you tablet weaving than stand up in front of a class full of people all staring at me.  


NAME AND HERALDRY

My name, Hrefna, means "raven" in Old Norse; my last name comes from the name Hrokr, meaning crow or rook - hence, I am Raven the Crow's Daughter.  That might sound a bit silly, but it spoke to me.  (I sort of have a thing for ravens - I have a pretty large raven tattoo, and I wear raven jewelry pretty much all the time).

My device, which was just approved earlier this year, is the second one I've held.  It looks like this: 


Per bend sinister azure and argent, a pomegranate slipped and leaved Or 

and a raven rising sable, a bordure counterchanged Or and azure



The pomegranate was a major feature on my old arms, which I had registered in 2011 when I joined the SCA.  Since I've shed my original (14th century English) persona, I decided this time around to keep the pomegranate as well as adding the raven for my new persona, as a way of honoring the "old me" and the new at the same time.  I chose the colors simply because I love blue and gold (my old device was black and white and red).  


HISTORY 

My history in the SCA is divided almost neatly in half.  I joined the SCA in 2011.  From 2011 - 2016 I focused mainly on 14th century clothing, and I enjoyed making new outfits to fit the theme of whichever event I was attending.  I did a lot of work on commission for friends, much of which is in this blog if you look back far enough. From 2016 - 2019 I took a long hiatus from the SCA in order to focus on my "real" life, which was kind of blowing up in my face at the time.  I returned in 2019 - right in time for the pandemic - and I've been focused on Viking/Norse ever since, and my sub-focus, I guess, is learning to make my clothing as historically accurate as possible (I shudder to look at some of my Viking attempts pre-2016, some of that stuff was so awful! Don't scroll back that far).  


WHAT'S NEXT? 

So where do I go from here?  I honestly don't know.  I spent many years keeping myself hidden as much as I could, and now I feel a bit invisible, although I know I'm not.  I love that I've been stepping out of my comfort zone a lot with A&S the last couple of years and I'd really like to keep building on that. Yes, I would like to be a Laurel one day, but that's going to be a long way off, I think.  I'm proud of my work, but I know I have a lot more work to do.    

I'm working on getting an Ansteorra Wiki page set up for myself - waiting to hear back from the people who do that, actually.  When it's published I'll add a link to the sidebar on this blog.  




So that was a long text post, sorry about that!  Hope it was at least somewhat entertaining.  Back soon with more STUFF.  







11 July 2025

SCA: Side Quest: Sprezzatura Viking Outfit

While I waited for the mail to bring me the final piece of my big hand sewing project, I started something on the side to keep me busy: 



So, in my SCA household, (La Compagnie della Sprezzatura), we each have a set of clothing in our preferred style in the company colors, with or without appliquéd device, that we all wear together on certain days. Lots of styles, but the same colors - it’s a neat effect. 




This is our company heraldry - I don’t know the correct heraldic terms for it, but it’s yellow and blue with a chalice and white (silver?) star floating above it.  I made a table runner after this device  in 2023: 




This outfit is mostly machine-sewn, which was kind of fun after all the hand sewing I’ve been doing the past several months.  I did hem both pieces by hand, and finished the neckline of the yellow dress and applied all of the trim pieces by hand.

The yellow dress was a lightweight “chambray” linen, meaning it had a yellow warp and a white weft. I overdyed the whole thing with yellow to cover up the white threads. It’s not exactly the shade of yellow I was hoping for, but I got this stuff on clearance for $12/yard, which is unreasonably cheap for 100% linen, so I’m happy with it as is I think. 

The blue dress is a medium-weight linen (about 9oz I guess?) which was given to me by a friend as a thank-you gift for helping them with a project. The teal trim on the top is scrap sari silk, and the zigzag tablet woven band is one I made last year and had in my stash (cotton crochet thread).  

I don’t plan on doing any appliqué on this outfit with the company heraldry - the colors are going to have to suffice.  I know a lot of people like to put big fancy appliqués on viking clothing, but it isn’t documentably period for this type of outfit — and neither is this vivid ultramarine blue or bright-ass yellow, I know, but we all pick our battles, LOL. 

So now I have a Sprezzatura outfit, hooray! I’m all set for our next “uniform” day, whenever that is (probably November). 




25 September 2023

SCA: Heraldic Table Runner For the New Sprezzatura Table

 Once the table for Sprezzatura's camp was complete I wanted a nice bit of something to go over the top of it.  I briefly considered painting the household's heraldry onto the top of the table, but the table will be covered with food and drink and all sorts of other stuff at events, so I decided to do make a fabric table runner - it will be easier to see, make the table look nicer, and be washable in case of spills.  


The fabric is cotton broadcloth, with cotton/poly bias tape edging. The appliqué is quilting cotton, backed with fusible interfacing, and the whole thing is backed with more blue broadcloth so that the back of the appliqué is hidden and protected. 

I haven't done appliqué in about 8 years, and I've never done it on my current sewing machine.  The machine did NOT want to cooperate. It's not perfect - I've done better in the past - but for not having done it in so long and having to practically alligator-wrestle this sewing machine into doing what I wanted, I think it came out pretty well.  I'm satisfied with it. 






SCA: Table For Sprezzatura

I refinished a table! 


Earlier this year, I had grand ideas about building some sort of Medieval-ish wooden table for my household's camp.  Until now, we have used a plastic folding table in the center of our pavilion for people to gather around and eat and hang out; but I wanted to make something nicer and somewhat period-ish. Unfortunately, budget and lumber prices kept me from starting the project I had in mind. 

But then, at the beginning of August, I found this little wooden table for free on the curb in my neighborhood: 




It's in great shape construction-wise, a perfect size for our camp (48" x 32", a little shorter than our plastic table, but wider), and the design, though a bit generically Pottery Barn-farmhouse-y, is sort of vaguely Medieval in style and resembles many trestle tables I've seen in artwork from the 1300-1400s, so I think it works.  Ten-foot rule, right? Or as my friend Kate says, it'll look just fine when seen from a galloping horse.    

The only problem with it was that the previous owner (?) stained it with black stain...and they did a horrible job of it. The stain was applied unevenly and not wiped off in between coats, so there are visible brush marks and places where the brush marks overlap, and even areas where it's obvious the stain pooled on the wood and just congealed there.  Also, they sanded off the original finish before staining it, and the sanding was done with a sandpaper that was so heavy and coarse that it marred the wood in places, and half the sanding marks are against the grain.  Ugh! 

Left: uneven and blotchy stain; 
right: sanding and brush marks against the grain



Enter: two cans of Easy Off oven cleaner.  

That's right, oven cleaner.  I saw this trick on Instagram, and then read some blogs about the process and watched some videos, and then tried it out on this table.  You basically spray the entire piece down with oven cleaner, let it sit for about half an hour, scrub it down thoroughly with soap and water, and then hose it off with water.  (The soap and water neutralize the cleaner chemicals so that you're not washing anything harmful into your yard, just dirty water).  Et voila: most of the stain came right off!  

this was after the first treatment; after the 
second pass it came almost completely clean! 


 

The rest of it came off pretty easily with the sander, and I was able to smooth out the rough sanding marks the previous DIYer left behind.  After it was all sanded, I cleaned off the entire piece and coated it with wood conditioner to prep the wood for staining.  




While the black stain that was originally on the table was nice, I wanted something lighter and warmer.  I have an "espresso" stain that is way too dark, and a "Jacobean" that is a nice dark brown but it's got weird green undertones.  I love my walnut stain, but I wanted darker, so I ended up putting two coats of the walnut on the wood, and it came out really nicely, I think: 




After the staining was complete, I coated the whole table in polyurethane to protect the finish.  



Tada!  New table.  The whole project took me about a month and a half, working on weekend mornings before it got too hot outside, and a little bit here and there during the week in my spare time. 


always wear your PPEs, people. 






04 January 2015

Heraldic Flags For Camp

This is a catch-up post from BAM - from November.  I promise, I'm trying to be better about posting follow-ups and finished project pictures. :)

So, we at Caerleon have been trying to figure out some camp-fencing ideas.  Nobody wants to keep people out, but you don't really want people just randomly walking through your campsite at events, either, you know?  Rather than going to the expense and trouble of building an actual fence, and having to pack, tote, assemble, and disassemble it at every event; or putting together a sheet wall, which IS useful if you're camped by a roadside, for controlling dust and traffic noise,  but walls you off from the rest of the world pretty effectively, I put a ropeline together to stake out around the camp.

First, I took a couple of white, cotton curtains, cut them into 12x14" blocks and painted the heraldic devices of some of our members onto them:


I used the same fabric-painting method I use for my other linen and cotton projects: a 3:1 mixture of acrylic craft paint and craft or fabric glue, with a few drops of water mixed in to make the paint flow and soak into the fabric better.  

I sewed each one to a blank backing of the same fabric, and left a rod pocket at the top of each one, like a curtain panel.  I also made up a bunch of plain flags in other colors.  All of them were then strung onto a plain hemp rope, which was strung from 36" wire plant stakes (spray painted gold) around our campsite at BAM: 

Yay, most of us! :D 


It was a pretty decent trial-run of the idea, and people liked the way it looked. It's definitely not a completed project, though: 

  1. 36" stakes are WAY too short, considering that nearly a foot of each stake is pushed into the ground, leaving not much to work with.  The ropeline ended up so low that it was almost more of a trip-hazard than anything.  The wire stakes were a stopgap measure, though - all of them will be replaced with taller, sturdier, wooden stakes before we go to Gulf Wars this year. 
  2. I only managed to get about a third of our devices painted onto flags by the time BAM rolled around.  By Gulf Wars I intend to have ALL of our devices going, as well as some bearing the actual Caerleon company device, to space in between each personal device. 

I'll be talking more about Gulf Wars preparations in the next couple of months.  I have a LOT of plans for the company campsite, some of them are even already in progress.  
Just have to get through Candlemas first.  :) 


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