|
| The Period Exemplar |
|
|
| This is the period model which I copied for the scroll. |
The Exemplar:
The scroll was based on some illuminations that I found in a Sotheby's catalog that I own, from a sale on December 3,
2002. It was from a Book of Hours, Use of Paris, and was from northern France (probably Paris) circa 1480. The
illumination is described as "A fine example of a mainstream Parisian manuscript in the style of the celebrated illuminator
Matre Francois." The main illuminations, including this one, are described as follows: "PANEL BORDERS THROUGHOUT on
all pages with 2-line initials with blue and gold acanthus leaves, coloured flowers and burnished gold rinceaux on black hairline
stems. TWELVE LARGE MINIATURES in arched compartments above 3 to 4 lines of text, with full borders on parti-coloured
liquid gold ground with birds, acanthus leaves, flowers and rinceaux, etc." The rather muted appearance of the colors
was caused by my scanner - the photos in the catalog are actually much brighter and closer to the results I achieved with
the paints I used.
I tried to follow this illumination very closely, although I made some changes in order to get it past the Caidan Heralds
(who get rather picky about format) and to show the achievement for the award, which was an Order of the Laurel. The
scroll was done on deer parchment which I bought some time ago. The ink used for the calligraphy was Calli brand calligraphy
ink (I was going to grind my own ink from an ink stick I had, but couldn't find it when I was ready to do the calligraphy
and since I was on a fairly short deadline, I finally gave up looking for it and used bottled ink).
Pigments used were dry pigments, bound with gum arabic and glair. The pigments are mostly period and include lead
white, vermillion, ultramarine (synthetic), chrome green (not period, but real pretty), yellow ochre, naples yellow,
lamp black, and of course a LOT of shell gold. All of the gold background is done in shell gold as this was how the
exemplar was illuminated, and shell gold was also used to add highlights to the foliage.
Besides putting the arms of Medb Renata in the place where the original had a miniature of King David kneeling in prayer,
I also deleted the snail that was crawling up the stem at the bottom of the border illumination, and replaced the bird in
the upper right corner with a wreath of laurel (I hate painting birds). The calligraphy was lined out in red (same as
the exemplar's text).
| Illumination Close Up |
|
|
| This is a picture of just the illumination part of the scroll. |
| Close up of Capital |
|
|
| The Capital "D" which starts the scroll. |
The Capital "D"
This is a close up shot of the capital initial, a letter D. The original exemplar also had a D as the starting letter
(for Domine). I liked this capital because it seemed rather unusual, being done in what appears to be in a shaded style
with some sort of red or vermillion, with a leafed background in the center but not around it which would be more typical
of the French style from this period. It was hard to make out the proper colors in some areas since the exemplar in
the catalog is only about 3"x4" (the original manuscript is 77mm by 53 mm). I'd blown the picture in the catalog up
so I could see more detail, but unfortunately even the best photography won't capture everything.
| Full Arms of Medb Renata |
|
|
| This shows the full achievement. |
The Heraldry:
The heraldry is Medb Renata's approved arms in the SCA. It's actually quite simple. Medb was being elevated
to the Order of the Laurel primarily for her naalbinding and knitting talents, but she's also an extremely skilled juggler
so when I asked her roommate what she thought Medb would like as supporters (i.e. the animals usually found "holding" the
shield) we thought a raven would be good (for House Corvus, which Medb is a member of), and a dancing bear just because it
seemed like a good idea. I added the ruff with the red piping on it just to emphasize that it's a circus bear.
Medb had told another friend that for the crest on top of the helmet she'd like a hand holding 3 juggling balls, but I couldn't
figure out how to draw that so I had the hand holding a naalbinding needle with yarn trailing from it instead (I modeled the
hand off my own left hand).
| Closer picture of the arms |

|
| This is a slightly better picture of the arms. |
|