Here’s the times for the video. -Thrust in Tierce 2:37 -Thrust in Carte 4:43 -Half cut 2 to thrust in Tierce 8:05 -Half cut 1 to thrust in Carte 12:20 -Half cut 3 to thrust low Carte & Half cut 4 to thrust seconde 14:12 -Parrying cut 7 with guard of St George to riposte in Tierce 18:27 -Thrusting with prime against the hanging guard 23:29 -Thrusting Carte over the arm 27:03 -Thrusting prime over the arm 30:51 -Feinting tierce to cut 1 at the head 34:30 -Feinting in Carte to strike the head with cut 2. 38:11 -Feinting in tierce to parry inside and cut the flank 40:47
I generally have taught at 2-3 events a year, though took a couple of years out from events up till the summer of 2018, now back at them, and back to a similar level. I'll be teaching at Fightcamp in the summer, and possibly others. I do also teach at both our AHF clubs every week.
You got me confused. Previously you described a moulinette as the main method of cutting in sabre of napoleonic period. Now you describe a "snap cut". What's the accurate way to attack?
It's not one or other, it's situational, The moulinet action is common, but it depends on the context of what you are doing and why. See this video where I go in to more detail of how and why you'd use each from a guard position. From a parry position you will also use both. ruclips.net/video/1bloi_CXsBo/видео.html
I did one here. It's an older video and I am intending to going back to making lesson videos, especially for sabre - ruclips.net/video/SRFb1hilp3s/видео.html
With a sabre this curved you usually have to turn it one way or other to get the point on line. Turning it to a hanging position on on outside parry is conventional even with much straighter blades. If you mean simply engaging in an inside or outside position and thrusting straight, well yes, so long as you can get the point on line, and that usually requires more displacement.
Great Vid. Keep up the Great Work. Still want to see you Vs Matt Easton in 1796 vs late 19th century saber.
Here’s the times for the video.
-Thrust in Tierce 2:37
-Thrust in Carte 4:43
-Half cut 2 to thrust in Tierce 8:05
-Half cut 1 to thrust in Carte 12:20
-Half cut 3 to thrust low Carte & Half cut 4 to thrust seconde 14:12
-Parrying cut 7 with guard of St George to riposte in Tierce 18:27
-Thrusting with prime against the hanging guard 23:29
-Thrusting Carte over the arm 27:03
-Thrusting prime over the arm 30:51
-Feinting tierce to cut 1 at the head 34:30
-Feinting in Carte to strike the head with cut 2. 38:11
-Feinting in tierce to parry inside and cut the flank 40:47
Surprised no one has thanked you yet
so thank you for this
Love to see these lengthy video once in a while, good job on making this!
It's like attending a seminar without the comfort of your own home.
What can I say? This is fantastic instruction. Top shelf stuff. I never get tired of your videos.
Great workshop, and it's hard to find stuff like this about saber on youtube. Thank you !
Love Esther's socks!
I appreciate the guy with pink socks matching his pink pumps.
I'm very happy with all that! Great content!!!
Outstanding!!! :)
Nick 'Happy With That' Thomas :') But no really this is great content and very helpful, do you host many workshops?
I generally have taught at 2-3 events a year, though took a couple of years out from events up till the summer of 2018, now back at them, and back to a similar level. I'll be teaching at Fightcamp in the summer, and possibly others. I do also teach at both our AHF clubs every week.
Really interesting
You got me confused. Previously you described a moulinette as the main method of cutting in sabre of napoleonic period. Now you describe a "snap cut". What's the accurate way to attack?
It's not one or other, it's situational, The moulinet action is common, but it depends on the context of what you are doing and why. See this video where I go in to more detail of how and why you'd use each from a guard position. From a parry position you will also use both.
ruclips.net/video/1bloi_CXsBo/видео.html
@@AcademyofHistoricalFencing Thank you very much. Please more instructional videos.
King of the North!!
Saludos, podrian hacer un video de pelea con cuchillo clasico? gracias
As a translation, this fellow is requesting a video about fighting with ordinary knives.
Hi. can you do a workshop on the correct execution of a fencing lunge? ... footwork is the foundation :-(
I did one here. It's an older video and I am intending to going back to making lesson videos, especially for sabre -
ruclips.net/video/SRFb1hilp3s/видео.html
would you ever thrust in the more conventional way without rotating the blade?
With a sabre this curved you usually have to turn it one way or other to get the point on line. Turning it to a hanging position on on outside parry is conventional even with much straighter blades. If you mean simply engaging in an inside or outside position and thrusting straight, well yes, so long as you can get the point on line, and that usually requires more displacement.
What a shame that the audio is so blown out
brilliant thank you