What I Learned From Trying to Make Sword Scabbards

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • Sometimes you can learn more from a (partially) failed project than a successful one, so perhaps some of you may find this useful. If nothing else it can give you an idea of why well-made, tightly fitted scabbards cost what they do...
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @Skallagrim
    @Skallagrim  3 года назад +435

    Since I just typed a long reply to a guy accusing me of "fanboy bullshit", might as well pin it since you might find specific examples helpful. These are mostly high-end sword makers, with a few mid-range examples as well:
    Lockwood Type XVI longsword without scabbard - $1150
    Lockwood Type XVI longsword with scabbard - $1700
    Castle Keep sword without scabbard - £1100 and up
    Castle Keep sword with scabbard - £1950 and up
    Longship Armoury swords - no scabbard included
    Angus Trim swords - no scabbard included
    Arms & Armor - no scabbard included (with a few exceptions)
    Baltimore Knife & Sword - no scabbard included
    Del Tin - no scabbard included
    Lukas Maestle-Goer - no scabbard included, unless purchased with the sword
    Valiant Armoury does offers swords with scabbard for around $1200-1300. However, although I like their swords and have nothing bad to say about their quality, they do not reach the standards of $1200-1300 swords from Albion or Lockwood. They're great but I can still tell the difference.
    And here is a price estimate from the website of Fable Blades:
    "Swords: As a ballpark guide most of my swords range between $4,000 and $8,000 USD (6-12K Au$) before adding scabbard work, which usually ranges from $1,000 to $5000 USD, depending on inclusions."
    Whether you realize it or not, you do pay extra for a scabbard. If it's included in a moderate price, that tells you that corners were cut somewhere compared to a sword for the same price that does not come with a scabbard. This does not mean that budget or mid-range swords at affordable prices that come with scabbards can't be good. Of course there is good quality in that category. But can it live up to high end stuff? Of course not.
    Long story short, if you want a scabbard with an Albion sword, be prepared to add about $500 to the price.

    • @toropazzoide
      @toropazzoide 3 года назад +50

      Literally had to scroll down to the last comment to find the dude, along with a couple of more weirdos. Someone doesn't understand that it doesn't matter if you're right, if you're an asshole about it that's the only thing that people will pick up from you lol

    • @PaletoB
      @PaletoB 3 года назад +2

      Anyone know if someone offers good quality sword blades, fittings and parts for you to assemble/fit yourself?

    • @Earthshipowner
      @Earthshipowner 3 года назад +20

      Hey Skal... Dye the leather BEFORE you glue up... Wood glue wont take leather dye the same as bare leather...

    • @Uryendel
      @Uryendel 3 года назад +2

      I'm the guy, and "accusing" is kind of a heavy exaggeration...
      In addition to what I already replied, I wanted to point out that on the Castle Keep website they offer to make custom scabbard from 300£, and on those 300£ since it's custom they're probably a lot going into reading the customer inquiry, asking him question, making a design, checking with the customer if it's really what he want, taking into account some customer would retract by that point and then making the scabbard in only one single exemplary and then throw away the design since it's custom and only for one customer.
      So a standardized basic design for a sword you produce in a reasonable quantity, certainly not 500$.

    • @implausibleimpossiblehypot4006
      @implausibleimpossiblehypot4006 3 года назад +3

      make a scabbard from tape and cardboard like you would if you were to make a wooden scabbard and then make wooden box to slide the cardboard scabbard into it... basically the tape cardboard scabbard is being hidden by a wooden case and it looks like a real scabbard and functions well

  • @Zetact_
    @Zetact_ 3 года назад +655

    King Arthur: “Does my new sword come with a free scabbard?”
    Merlin: “Your new scabbard comes with a free sword.”

    • @Ranstone
      @Ranstone 3 года назад +63

      TBH, Arthur's scabbard had the magic ability to stop your wounds from losing blood, which would effectively make you able to shrug off 5.56 like a boss, since loss of blood is the leading cause of fatality in gun wounds.

    • @edgarburlyman738
      @edgarburlyman738 3 года назад +33

      My joke was going to be, "the scabbard costs more than the sword because the sword can only cut through anything but the scabbard makes you invincible". Your joke is so similar, though.
      Also if Excalibur's scabbard makes Arthur invincible and Percival has a ring that makes him invincible, why do the rest of them even bother being knights.

    • @ctrlaltdebug
      @ctrlaltdebug 3 года назад +11

      Ranstone that's most true of lower powered rounds. Rifle rounds pulverize organs from the sheer shock of that much energy and can result in one shot drops at close range. Just see what happened when St. Kyle vs antifa felons in Kenosha.

    • @ShiningDarknes
      @ShiningDarknes 3 года назад +14

      @@edgarburlyman738 Because just 2 people would take FOREVER to cut through an entire army or take control of a city/castle.

    • @ShiningDarknes
      @ShiningDarknes 3 года назад +5

      @@ctrlaltdebug it is also only true for rounds that leave nice clean wound cavities.

  • @somersethuscarl2938
    @somersethuscarl2938 3 года назад +487

    And this folks is why Tod of Tod's Workshop charges so much for a scabbard

    • @Skallagrim
      @Skallagrim  3 года назад +218

      Exactly. He does top-notch work.

    • @neruneri
      @neruneri 3 года назад +42

      I wonder if one of the main reasons he even learned how to make them is because he's so deeply proficient with making knives in particular, and it makes more sense economically to learn how to make scabbards to go with those knives and daggers? I suspect there's a lot of bladesmiths elsewhere who can't justify taking the time out of making what they're good at making to learn how to make scabbards well. People don't seem to enjoy paying as much for scabbards as they're worth, they are more willing to pay that extra money for the tool or weapon itself.

    • @somersethuscarl2938
      @somersethuscarl2938 3 года назад +45

      ​@@neruneri Think it goes with his sword making both for high end custom work but mainly as he is a sword smith prop maker for film and TV. He has been the sword guy for decades, most recently for The Witcher etc, so he makes the sword and scabbard(s) for the shows. He’s been doing it for as long as I’ve known him, over 20 years. I used to bump into him at shows when I worked for another prop maker in the 90’s. Last year when at a show chatting with a very old friend who made the armour for that show he saw him in the crowd and brought him over and I had a great insider over view of their work.

    • @marcusmt4746
      @marcusmt4746 3 года назад +33

      @@neruneri The original historical items were made with a complete division of labor. The blacksmith forged, polished and sharpened. Some people did work on the hilt, jewelers decorated the hilt, made engravings.
      The carpenters made the scabbard.
      Each operation was done by a separate person within the guild.
      And this is beneficial both in the Middle Ages and now.

    • @phatbassanchor
      @phatbassanchor 3 года назад +20

      @@marcusmt4746 Those artisans were generally in the same area of the town's marketplace as well. The scabbard maker would likely make saddles, horse tack, saddlebags, maybe even travel trunks. Have any of you seen the tv show The Repair Shop on Netflix? Wood wrights, leather smiths, watch makers, jewelers and other expert artisans all under one roof! It's an exceptional show and shows off how crafts folk worked together historically and still do today :)

  • @Ghost_of_Avalon
    @Ghost_of_Avalon 3 года назад +487

    This reminds me of the story about a kid who gets caught trying to steal a vest from a tailor store. When asked why he stole it the kid says that he couldnt afford it and that the vest couldn't be worth the price it was being sold for. So the tailor decides to make the kid create an exact duplicat of the vest he tried to steal so the kid can learn, stitch by stitch, why the vest was as expensive as it was. Sometimes you just can't understand the complexity and value of something until you try to make it yourself.

    • @grzegorzs.7313
      @grzegorzs.7313 3 года назад +6

      True.

    • @aldente3868
      @aldente3868 3 года назад +14

      @@mrbaileys4371 Wait, if he's a master craftsman how does he not know how to stitch a vest?

    • @slaviclettuce7937
      @slaviclettuce7937 3 года назад +23

      it depends sometimes where things are just mass produced such as iPhones they are way overpriced for what it takes to make them but in the case of the story you told this is vest is a product made by an individual who is not selling way overpriced cause he has competition so it varies.

    • @NumbDogma69185
      @NumbDogma69185 3 года назад +2

      @@aldente3868 plot hole

    • @aldente3868
      @aldente3868 3 года назад +2

      @@NumbDogma69185 Exactly. 😁

  • @Hudson316
    @Hudson316 3 года назад +320

    Leaving in mistakes and showing failures is one of the main things that makes Adam Savage's build videos so good, it's important to show the failures or else anyone who tries to get into making for themselves is going to get disheartened and give up at the first major failure instead of iterating and adapting their designs.

    • @jaysblades
      @jaysblades 3 года назад +1

      Yes!

    • @Taolan8472
      @Taolan8472 3 года назад +1

      Its the "Human Element". In a similar vein it is one of the key drivers behind the popularit of Taras Kul, "Crazy Russian Hacker". We like to know our favorite creators are human. Constant perfection and success gets boring after a while. Its why Monster Garage made such a big deal of the challenges they failed, because that failure was fun to watch.

    • @-42-47
      @-42-47 3 года назад +1

      Mistakes are awesome, it's by far the easiest way to learn

    • @guypierson5754
      @guypierson5754 3 года назад +2

      The man who never made a mistake never made anything.

    • @Semiautoautomatic_shaman
      @Semiautoautomatic_shaman 3 года назад

      You are right I should show my kydex F$@& ups 😂🤙🏼

  • @crimsoncutz8430
    @crimsoncutz8430 3 года назад +178

    I never knew it was so hard to find suitable things other than people to stick swords in

    • @sirapple2406
      @sirapple2406 3 года назад +31

      I mean, if people are the only available materials.
      Well, you gotta do what you gotta do.
      *Stabs person*

    • @judgment5090
      @judgment5090 3 года назад +19

      *The iron in the blood shall sharpen my blade*

    • @janbernad4729
      @janbernad4729 3 года назад +10

      @@sirapple2406 How about a scabbard made of people?

    • @nair.127
      @nair.127 3 года назад +5

      😱 lol
      Dark humor
      Yet approved darkness

    • @Slash-XVI
      @Slash-XVI 3 года назад +9

      @@janbernad4729 I feel like that would not be very good for the longterm integrity of the blade. Human tissue contains a good amount of water, which will increase the risk of rust forming on your blade. Additionally there are areas with widely differing pH-values inside the human body, depending on where you actually try to store your blade, it might come into contatc with acidic or basic substances of varying composition, which will compromise your blade.

  • @SchandorfTeal
    @SchandorfTeal 3 года назад +84

    As someone who makes furniture for a living, I can tell you that it is a good idea to make sure the wood is dried well before processing it. Take for instance a piece of Oak fresh off the tree and dry it completely and it will contract about 12,2%

    • @vorrnth8734
      @vorrnth8734 3 года назад

      Well that's true for furniture. The difference here is that a sword is moved around alot. Furniture not so much.

    • @najroe
      @najroe 3 года назад +11

      Yes! And if you want to be picky, it shrinks differently in lenght, along growth rings and across growth rings... then we have the warping if thin pieces like these are joined without paying attention to that and/or pieces of different wood species that act differently (inlay...) are joined... I make traditional knives (saami type) as hobby, made my first some 40 years ago, they use very different materials, horn, bone, leather and wood to make up both handle and scabbard. I have made scabbard to a Leuku that had a blade 500mm long and roughly 4mm thick, interesting things can occur over even that short length if one is not attentive

    • @corwinhyatt519
      @corwinhyatt519 3 года назад +3

      This was the first thing that came to mind when he was talking about how the first scabbard he showed just kept getting tighter. Did he make sure the wood he used was fully seasoned or was it fresh off the lumber store shelf stuff usually used for fences and other outdoor projects where a bit of swelling and shrinkage isn't much of an issue?

    • @FairlyUnknown
      @FairlyUnknown 3 года назад +4

      That's why it's best for wood to sit for a few years before using it if it's newly processed, but that's a lot to ask of people sometimes

    • @justamule707
      @justamule707 3 года назад +2

      As a side note, don't use oak for a scabbard unless you put a liner in it.

  • @privatekarateka3745
    @privatekarateka3745 3 года назад +133

    The working of the wood is this extreme because you use pine. Generally, scabbards tend to be made out of a hardwood or wood that has a tight grain. But never use oak tho, the acidity of the wood will mess up the blade. If I remember correctly, the scabbards of Japanese swords were made of magnolia wood, for it's hardness and lack of sap, but I could be wrong on that one. Most woodglues are quite acidic as well(construction foam not included)so I recommend just making a starch based glue out of rice or flower. However you will need to apply lacquer because water will dissolve it. Alternatively, if you can find a glue that isn't acidic and works with wood, that would be the best. Anyway, great video.

    • @jort93z
      @jort93z 3 года назад +10

      You are right. The japanese do typically use Magnolia obovata. They still do.
      It is not extremly hard, but it is very easy to work with.

    • @torianholt2752
      @torianholt2752 3 года назад +16

      Europeans tended to use poplar and balsam wood, both are soft, non-resinous and tannin free.

    • @marcusmt4746
      @marcusmt4746 3 года назад +5

      Linden wood is great for any scabbard.
      Beech wood too.
      Regular PVC-based glue works well.

    • @marcusmt4746
      @marcusmt4746 3 года назад +1

      @@torianholt2752
      Poplar is a poor wood for precise carving.

    • @torianholt2752
      @torianholt2752 3 года назад +5

      @@marcusmt4746 Native species used such as White Poplar are very suitable for precise carving, as they are tight-grained and very resistant to warping and shrinking.

  • @tasatort9778
    @tasatort9778 3 года назад +75

    The reason behind a scabard being "loose" is to allow for the expansion, contraction, and possible warping of the wood core. Having a "low profile" tight scabard is a recipe for blade binding.

    • @mementomori4972
      @mementomori4972 3 года назад +9

      yea, but there is "loose" and there is loose. It still has to be fitted probably. A solution would be, to use wood, that is not hygroscopic, like European ceder. Poplar is most common, because it contains no tannin and wont react with the metal, but still is hygroscopic. A perfect solution would be thermal treated poplar, which contains no tannin and won't swell or shrink anymore.

    • @alexanderflack566
      @alexanderflack566 3 года назад +11

      @@mementomori4972 That, and I would consider making it fit tighter at the neck and tip and fairly loose through the middle of the blade. That keeps it from rattling around without risking it binding so much.

    • @allstarwoo4
      @allstarwoo4 3 года назад

      You can avoid some binding by having relieve cuts.

    • @alaric_3015
      @alaric_3015 3 года назад

      maybe, if you are using katana or some thick bladed sword, but European longsword with spring steel probably won't bent

    • @sytritewarum5720
      @sytritewarum5720 3 года назад +4

      @@alaric_3015 He's talking about the wood warping, not the metal. If your metal is warping that much, you have bigger concerns than scabbard problems...

  • @johnetherington7799
    @johnetherington7799 3 года назад +32

    I've made several scabbard for myself and have had requests to make them for other people. I average one failed blank to each success. Getting the fit right is very tricky and what seems to fit when clamped fails when glued. I carve mine out btw.
    I found a looser fit at test clamp tightens up when glued and tightens further when the leather is wet formed, glued and sewn on and its just really tricky to get right.
    I've also changed recently to using hide glue rather than PVA wood glue. PVA is uncorrectable but hide glue can be heated to unstick and fix mistakes. I think this will make a huge difference in my attrition rate.
    Lining the inside seems to give a bit of wiggle room too for fit errors as the squish in the lining gives a titch of leeway but still holds snug to the blade

  • @Spectre.Fishing
    @Spectre.Fishing 3 года назад +55

    Knifemaker here. I sheaths are harder to get perfect than knives. If made from leather. Say from a brand like Bark River often the sheath costs more than the knife it comes with.

  • @bvoyelr
    @bvoyelr 3 года назад +53

    I've made a few scabbards and didn't have any of the difficulties you had. If you want the sword to fit, don't try to use the wood itself to do that: that's the liner's job. Just get some nice floofy wool in there -- a little at the bottom to prevent klanking and a little at the top to get a nice secure fit. With that, leather wrapping isn't a problem at all. The scabbard will contract, but the liner will take up the slack. It'll also be a suitable barrier to any wood glue, at least for a short time (they always say not to store swords in scabbards!)
    The main problems I had were 1) some leather dyes are not great. They are, in fact, hot garbage. Finding this out on a completed scabbard is irritating 2) putting in any intricate detailing on on/under the leather requires a level of artistic ability that is beyond me. Plus if you want ridges or spines, you pretty much have to abandon the wrap method and switch to gluing the leather to the scabbard, otherwise you won't get the definition you're likely looking for.

    • @kamirostorino9416
      @kamirostorino9416 3 года назад +2

      thank you for advice... I was thinking about making a scabbard for my heavy longsword (weight bordering 2 handed only swords, almost to heavy to swing with one hand) cuz my leather sheath I had for it simply got damaged over time. And thanks to you I now know that I don't have to be so perfect with fitting. I can carve more space than needed and only fit it at 2 ends.

    • @LarryGarfieldCrell
      @LarryGarfieldCrell 3 года назад +2

      The one scabbard I tried to line (with felt) had the problem that the point of the blade always catches when I put it in. It takes several attempts to get it to go in properly. How do you keep that from happening?

    • @gabrielplatte1521
      @gabrielplatte1521 3 года назад +1

      @@LarryGarfieldCrell Often there will only be felt (or wool, or velvet, or whatever) only in the upper portion and very end. This way there's far less potential for catching, as you have more control early on, and the scabbard guides it at the end. Leather is also an option, as it doesn't catch as much, but usually you'll line the whole length.

    • @allstarwoo4
      @allstarwoo4 3 года назад

      felt tape is a great alternative

    • @nathanbrown8680
      @nathanbrown8680 3 года назад +1

      The advice about storage is wrong or incomplete. I know from Matt Easton that metal scabbards at least are very good for long term storage if the blade is clean and dry when it goes in so you're at least missing the qualifier "wooden."

  • @greencreekranch
    @greencreekranch 3 года назад +68

    The "too tight" -joke becomes a lot better if you know, that the German word for scabbard is "scheide" whuch is also the German word for vagina

    • @bigolbigmoose9550
      @bigolbigmoose9550 3 года назад +13

      Schlong sword go brrrrr

    • @Mtonazzi
      @Mtonazzi 3 года назад +21

      Well, in Latin the word for scabbard is... vagina

    • @Bajbajoc
      @Bajbajoc 3 года назад +11

      In Polish "pochwa" means both either.
      Real knight doesn't afraid of blood on his sword.

    • @Mtonazzi
      @Mtonazzi 3 года назад +1

      @@Bajbajoc Just remember to clean the blood off it and you're good to go~

    • @ctrlaltdebug
      @ctrlaltdebug 3 года назад +3

      Too tight? You have to put it in and pull it out repeatedly!

  • @phatbassanchor
    @phatbassanchor 3 года назад +214

    I have no issue with a scabbard being sold separately... as long as one is available to fit that blade. When I do take issue is when there is no scabbard available at all. Just finding a sheath or scabbard to fit a blade purchased elsewhere can be a nightmare in itself. Bladesmiths need to make an appropriate scabbard available, even if it is a separate purchase. Thanks Skall :) Adventure on my friend, Phat

    • @neruneri
      @neruneri 3 года назад +26

      I disagree, just because you are competent at making swords doesn't guarantee that you are competent at making scabbards. It's a very different skill, and barring exceptions it would require hiring someone who has that specific skill or your bladesmiths have to take time out of their own specialized craft to learn a sidecraft. There's a reason why in the old days you often (obviously not always) had different people making bows and making arrows, and why gunsmiths don't necessarily make ammunition. They're different skills, and while some people want to learn both, for other people it doesn't make sense to go out of your specialized field.
      Remember that you have to be able to economically justify taking that time and effort learning those skills. For a lot of people, I imagine it makes a lot more sense financially to stick with what they are good at and keep doing the thing they're good at doing.

    • @Mtonazzi
      @Mtonazzi 3 года назад +12

      @@neruneri Indeed, and even with Albions that have blanks cut with CNC, since the distal tapering, beveling, cetera is done by hand, no two blades are exactly the same, so it'll still need each scabbard to be done with the intended sword at hand.
      That's why I agree with you and why you've got people like Todd whom make custom scabbards. One cannot expect a bladesmith to also do the work of a carpenter.

    • @phatbassanchor
      @phatbassanchor 3 года назад +29

      @@neruneri I did NOT say that bladesmiths should MAKE the scabbards, merely that they provide the opportunity to make the purchase of a scabbard to fit that specific blade. I fully hold to that statement. Adventure on, Phat

    • @phatbassanchor
      @phatbassanchor 3 года назад +18

      @@Mtonazzi All my favorite bladesmiths offer scabbards to fit their production run and custom pieces. It is proper form to offer scabbards, even if the smith needs to hire them made. You are welcome to disagree. However, that does not make you right. Adventure on, Phat

    • @KappaKiller108
      @KappaKiller108 3 года назад +25

      @@neruneri would you buy a car that needed tires that no company made?
      It wouldn't matter how cool the car was, It would be worthless because it's incomplete

  • @rectercon
    @rectercon 3 года назад +36

    what do you get when you mix a machinist and a carpenter? cabinets that only open in winter.

    • @AnimalMotha
      @AnimalMotha 3 года назад +9

      I always have to smile when people with a "metal" background get started working with wood and want to apply the same principles..

    • @akashahuja2346
      @akashahuja2346 3 года назад +3

      Exactly what happened to me.
      I was used to working with metal and the first cabinet I made didn't open in winter.
      On the other hand I am ok at making scabbards. Must have learn from my earlier failures.

  • @quinncykaluzniak5429
    @quinncykaluzniak5429 3 года назад +18

    I did make a scabbard once, it was crappy looking but it worked, I have a ton of respect for those that make them professionally

  • @jaysblades
    @jaysblades 3 года назад +28

    FWIW I appreciate you sharing your "failures" like this, as I find I often learn a lot from it. I think too often people are afraid to show when something doesn't go quite right because it makes them look like they're not an expert, but the thing is, sharing the mistakes can help other people learn about them without making them themselves.

    • @matt79de
      @matt79de 3 года назад +1

      I appreciate the way of looking at failures it inspires as well: The analytical debriefing style of "What happend? What went wrong? Why?"

  • @mementomori4972
    @mementomori4972 3 года назад +163

    When you make something like this, use a wood that is not hygroscopic (like European cedar), or that was thermal treated. Those woods wont swell, when they get wet and they wont shrink, when they dry out.

    • @kothaelser3282
      @kothaelser3282 3 года назад +4

      I would use plywood since it's a lot cheaper and won't warp much at all. That scabbard would get a leather cover.

    • @mementomori4972
      @mementomori4972 3 года назад +21

      @@kothaelser3282 It will, over time. and it will warp especially, If you carve layers away and end up with an even number of layers on specific spots. If you put the time and effort into building something like this, you should at least use the proper materials,...and a piece of wood is not unaffordable. Plywood is good, if you work with thick pieces, but not with thin layers.

    • @kothaelser3282
      @kothaelser3282 3 года назад +2

      @@mementomori4972 The idea was to work with a sandwich type construction as shown in the video. You wouldn't even need to carve or sand away at the plywood.

    • @mementomori4972
      @mementomori4972 3 года назад +2

      @@kothaelser3282 It wont fit snugly, because the blade is not square bar of metal. It would be a cheap DIY solution.

    • @rray1953
      @rray1953 3 года назад +1

      I make mine with poplar...

  • @codybaker1255
    @codybaker1255 3 года назад +343

    The one dislike is the guy who tried to make a scabbard, failed, and refuses to admit it.

    • @joeh858
      @joeh858 3 года назад +10

      Or people who dislike the economic truths in the introduction. Poor sods.

    • @shahabmos5130
      @shahabmos5130 3 года назад +3

      Or normal people who use inventory instead of a wooden boot .

    • @enzopereyra9177
      @enzopereyra9177 3 года назад

      Or bots

    • @zebradun7407
      @zebradun7407 3 года назад +4

      In all Videos there are a set number of dislikes, like some people or Bots go around and spend all day disliking every video.

    • @Retr0Whiskey
      @Retr0Whiskey 3 года назад

      All 27 of them :)
      (At time of typing, at least.)

  • @jaysblades
    @jaysblades 3 года назад +92

    This is relevant for me as I was thinking about trying to make my own scabbard for the Soldat when it comes in...

    • @KOHoxton
      @KOHoxton 3 года назад +3

      Soldat "sold what?" Dat sword, lovely name.

    • @thoro1932
      @thoro1932 3 года назад +5

      @@KOHoxton its german and means soldier

    • @pelikanvernichter
      @pelikanvernichter 3 года назад +6

      @@thoro1932 I like how English people try to figure out what the German word means

    • @OpiumusPrime
      @OpiumusPrime 3 года назад +3

      @@thoro1932 funny enough, in Russian too

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 3 года назад +1

      @@OpiumusPrime French, too!

  • @johnraltenburg9398
    @johnraltenburg9398 3 года назад +79

    Archeologists are gonna think you're a warlord with all these swords in your house.

    • @nickwilliams8302
      @nickwilliams8302 3 года назад +14

      He's not that old. There's still time.

    • @johnraltenburg9398
      @johnraltenburg9398 3 года назад +7

      @@nickwilliams8302 I'd happily be a mercenary of his

    • @charlottewalnut3118
      @charlottewalnut3118 3 года назад +2

      @@johnraltenburg9398 agreed

    • @keithharper32
      @keithharper32 3 года назад +8

      just imagine what they'll think if he decides to be buried with some.

    • @TrueFork
      @TrueFork 3 года назад +13

      ​@Russ Olson "clearly votive offerings, since the scabbards were deliberately constructed to make the blades impossible to draw"

  • @schnaps1790
    @schnaps1790 3 года назад +15

    its a tropical Scabbard
    only works in humid conditions

  • @RiderOftheNorth1968
    @RiderOftheNorth1968 3 года назад +19

    A "moist" working area is a nono when it comes to woodworking of this type. The shrinking, as you noticed, wil bite you in the.... well pommel. Work the wood (yes i said it) in the same humidity that you plan to use it in, at least what you will store it in.

  • @Ranstone
    @Ranstone 3 года назад +26

    My takeaway:
    Make it out of plastic, and lie to your friends when they ask what type of wood it is.

    • @SeaSerpentLevi
      @SeaSerpentLevi 3 года назад +6

      Just tell them that the tree was made in china

  • @HerraTohtori
    @HerraTohtori 3 года назад +35

    Okay, I don't usually go for "first comment" but this time when I opened my subscriptions page, this video was there, published 6 seconds ago.
    I have never seen that short a time, and I take it as a cosmic sign that me checking my subscriptions and this video being published almost simultaneously means I have a moral duty to inform everyone of this. Rejoice!

  • @inncubus666
    @inncubus666 3 года назад +1

    Seeing mistakes and getting the info on why etc is honestly probably more use than showing a perfect workflow.

  • @ct7567CaptRex
    @ct7567CaptRex 3 года назад +25

    I think sometimes making the scabbard is more important, intricate and difficult than the sword itself. Think about it. Quality, function and appearance wise you want it to be the swords equal. What good is a sword without a functioning scabbard? They are complementary to each other.

    • @Naluukti
      @Naluukti 3 года назад +3

      Excalibur's scabbard (say that 10x fast!) was worth far more than the blade!

    • @TitusVarus
      @TitusVarus 3 года назад

      @@Naluukti True. A pity Arthur put less value on it.

  • @TurtleChad1
    @TurtleChad1 3 года назад +128

    A turtle approved scabbards

    • @rikospostmodernlife
      @rikospostmodernlife 3 года назад +1

      Hey, is that your brother who was in Aron Ra's video?

    • @NoPingAndy
      @NoPingAndy 3 года назад +13

      For a turtle, you get around pretty fast.

    • @JanetStarChild
      @JanetStarChild 3 года назад

      Are you a turtle whom enjoys wearing blue?

    • @saf4433
      @saf4433 3 года назад +7

      Dude wtf!?!? You're on leftist RUclips comments, crossdressing RUclips comment section, and now you're on HEMA comment section?
      The variety of content you invade is impressive

    • @kyre4189
      @kyre4189 3 года назад +4

      @@saf4433 Well, so are you and me. Are you patting yourself on the back? Lol

  • @KickyFut
    @KickyFut 3 года назад +8

    A good trick, which I also saw Shad use, is to make the scabbard a little bigger and then line with felt or fabric to eliminate the rattle.

    • @pete3011
      @pete3011 3 года назад +2

      Seems like you'd need to be careful w/that, though, as any moisture could lead to a rusty blade, even humidity in some cases. You might be able to soak it in thick oil or something.

    • @KickyFut
      @KickyFut 3 года назад

      @@pete3011 but if the glued fabric was allowed to dry when the scabbard is still open in pieces, the humidity should be evaporated... No?

    • @pete3011
      @pete3011 3 года назад +3

      @@KickyFut No, sometimes ambient humidity can be absorbed. I'm basing this off people...like me... storing guns in cloth lined cases and them coming out rusty, you're told not to do that-though humidity shouldn't be a problem for shorter periods, obviously.
      There are some modern solutions that might work, like silicone impregnation, like they do w/gun socks.

    • @KickyFut
      @KickyFut 3 года назад +1

      @@pete3011 oh, I wasn't thinking Elmer's, but one of the thicker gel types or a glue gun... Good to know, as this is all theory on my part. I don't even have a metal sword yet!

  • @ebattleon
    @ebattleon 3 года назад +5

    PVA wood glue has water based solvent so carbon steel blade in scabbard while it dries will cause rusting.
    You could make a loose scabbard and epoxy some rare magnets inside and the sword won't rattle or fall out.

  • @Fede_uyz
    @Fede_uyz 3 года назад +15

    Yeah, this us super important. An hour of a US, UK or CA based craftman will run you at least 15bucks on the CHEAPEST side.
    Lets say the scabard only takes 5 hours to produce... then thats about 75 usd in time ALONE. Add materials, and other inherent costs and you already have 100-120 bucks.
    But craftmans usually charge much more for their time, 20, 30, 40, 50 usd an hour (remember, they are trained specialized workers)
    So lets say 25 usd an hour * some 5 hours of work, thats 125 in time alone. Add some materials and so on... 170-190 usd.
    Now, in india a DAY's work is on average 5usd. So lets say the craftman charges even more... 7 usd a day... or around less than 1 usd an hour. Maybe around 70 cents an hour. So, with some materials and a day's work, a scabbard is maybe 20-30 bucks.
    Oh, materials are also cheaper, so even less money.

    • @Bourikii2992
      @Bourikii2992 3 года назад

      Buy and import your scabbard from India with a contract.
      Problem solved.
      That's what free trade and capitalism is for.

  • @TheZeroDozer
    @TheZeroDozer 3 года назад +12

    Those failed project will pretty much serve as experience for the next ones.

    • @DrakkarCalethiel
      @DrakkarCalethiel 3 года назад +7

      A prime example why failures are awesome and useful to share.

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf 3 года назад +7

    Getting such leather is actually quite easy - either go to the next cobbler (there are still many around in most countries) or order it online.
    I have so far made a few sheaths for knives for friends and family. The first 2 were too tight with no extra layers so the knife cut through the thread quickly. next was with an inlay of wood and then followed by 3-layer leather. Didn't take that long to learn how to get it to fit and now i can reliably make a sheath just from 2 layers of leather that also hold the knife snuggly. So it is not that hard to make a basic sheath.
    A Sword scabbard is on my project list and despite that just being a hobby and with very little space, equipment or experience i am confident that with ~150$ in total i can make a decent fitting one that will last for many years of use. With some time and practice, like 4-5 scabbards, i think i could get it to the point were i could sell them and the cost (without work time) would be like 50$. Not sure how long it would take to make one. The stitching takes forever.
    And for wood-working:
    You should have the wood either be dried to the correct level and then quickly use it (quite hard if you do not do that professionally) or let it acclimate in the climate/room it is going to be used.

  • @glyph5090
    @glyph5090 3 года назад +5

    As the little green master ones said , ''The greatest teacher, failure is'' .

  • @chrissoto7187
    @chrissoto7187 3 года назад +7

    I recommend using PVC and a heat gun to make the core of the scabbard from their trim away the excess and cover with leather.

    • @Ranstone
      @Ranstone 3 года назад

      100%.
      Or use polypropylene sheets and do it the same way he did it with wood.
      If you ever try this, make sure it's NOT the hot water piping. It's heat treated to avoid melting, but it's unworkable and bad for steel because of this.

    • @AnimalMotha
      @AnimalMotha 3 года назад +1

      @@Ranstone For Germany at least, that would be PP (Polypropylene), so the OP was correct to direct one to PVC. But be sure to work it in a well ventilated area, or even better outside. Those thermoplasts can outgas some nasty stuff when heated sufficiently.

  • @jeff-hc8ux
    @jeff-hc8ux 3 года назад +1

    I love these sorts of videos. It makes it easier for amateurs like me to learn

  • @forsetigodofjusticeexcelle7506
    @forsetigodofjusticeexcelle7506 3 года назад +12

    Too tight, high moisture levels and tearing the leather off...
    Yes Skall...

  • @DeadMeat991
    @DeadMeat991 3 года назад +1

    Very educational. And yes, sitting down to craft the most basic looking thing often reveals how not so basic it really is.

  • @shawn4116
    @shawn4116 3 года назад +4

    3:55 I got genuinely excited to see a sword that I own lol

  • @ABACUStoPC
    @ABACUStoPC 3 года назад +1

    I made myself a couple of leather sheath for my fixed knives and were very happy with how they turned out, wanted try to learn making scabbards as well but it require a lot more tools especially for the wood core part, have to agree with Skall it's not a easy task to do

  • @TeamKhandiKhane
    @TeamKhandiKhane 3 года назад +7

    "...left a sword in there overnight and it immediately rust despite being oiled..." Welcome to South East Texas Skall

  • @laszlogajdacs4202
    @laszlogajdacs4202 3 года назад

    Some time ago, I made a scabbard and lined the inside with flannelette (an old shirt ). I applied a bit of silicon oil to help with rust proofing. It has been working well. High end medieval scabbards were lined with lambs wool. Lining a scabbard will stop it rattling while allowing some room for the wood shrink / expand as it will naturally do. It is thought it may also help keep the sword rust free as it gets a wipe over from the lambs wool every time it is drawn.

  • @marcopohl4875
    @marcopohl4875 3 года назад +6

    "At this price, the food should come with packaging to keep it fresh longer"

  • @federicoorlandi7731
    @federicoorlandi7731 3 года назад +2

    I began to make wood and leather scabbards for my reenactment blades last year, from since I've made (as an amateur) a couple of them and I learned a few things:
    - Plywood, seems to be less subject to humidity than regular wood (plus in my case it's always been leather covered, so the looks is not key factor).
    - Painting both the inside and the outside of the wooden part with wood stain also helps with humidity isolation.
    - I make scabbards almost in the same way Skallagrim did, with a wooden negative profile of the blade sandwitched between the two faces. In order to manage the distal taper I use several layers of glued paper that progressively thickens from the debole towards the forte.
    - When gluing the parts, I like to leave the blade inside wrapped in greaseproof paper (here in Italy we call it oven paper, I don't know the exact name in English but it's a kind of paper used in cooking to prevent the food from sticking while in the oven), I found it's really good preventing the glue from sticking to the blade. However I don't leave the blade inside the scabbard while drying, I just fix the parts with tiny needles that I remove afterwards.
    - In my humble opinion, I would use less glue and much more pliers (basically I'd cover the entire perimeter of the scabbard with pliers, leaving a few millimeter between them, even clothespins works if they are a lot).
    - The leather should always be wet during the stitching. I don't have experience with stitching along the edge, I always cross-stitched on the back face.
    Hope sharing my personal experience helps someone :)

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 3 года назад

      Not sure which Italian word got mistranslated to "pliers" (a tool, not a material).

    • @federicoorlandi7731
      @federicoorlandi7731 3 года назад

      @@johndododoe1411 You're right, I translated the word out of memory and it was wrong.
      I meant some sort of clamps.

  • @bellakaldera3305
    @bellakaldera3305 3 года назад +4

    I have made many wooden and leather covered wood scabbards, they are a lot of work, sharp tools are essential, A good table saw allows you to cut the scabbard halves from the same piece of hardwood (only hardwood). you can also use a router to hollow it out, but it will always come down to sharp chisels and gouges. Wet, stretch and stitch leather over the wood to finish. I like gorilla glue to put the scabbard halves together.
    I have only made a couple swords, but I've done dozens of scabbards.

    • @johnetherington7799
      @johnetherington7799 3 года назад

      I always use poplar for mine. Low tannen, light but tough.
      And yes, they are a lot of work and easy to ruin at every step along the way

  • @peterspaltman
    @peterspaltman 3 года назад +1

    Love that you are not afraid to show your errors. I stream my knifemaking and i make lots of misstakes lol. Like the man says, there is more to learn from failure then there is from succes

  • @zep4814
    @zep4814 3 года назад +3

    I have made wooden scabbards before, and never had this contraction issue. A thing that may solve it is 1: leaving the wood in a dry place for a few weeks to cure and 2: making the scabbards have more room than the sword, forming the scabbard around a wooden insert in the shape of the sword. I personally used the medieval chiseling method for making scabbards, and live in a place where there usually is between 90 and 99% humidity, and never had any issues.

    • @Sondre_Friis_Nyberg
      @Sondre_Friis_Nyberg 3 года назад

      The most likely reason he had the contraction problem is, as he stated in the video, the different humidity percent. He moved it from: very humid - humid - quite dry. The large difference was probably a factor to why it contracted so much😕

    • @ShepardCommander
      @ShepardCommander 3 года назад

      I personally would recommend drying wood anywhere from 8 months to a year (depending on humidity, impossible to dry properly in coastal areas) after soaking it in mineral oil. Unless you buy kiln dried wood, the wood isn't gonna be properly dry. I only have experience with quince wood though (make very good bows).

  • @ndld4955
    @ndld4955 3 года назад +1

    I always find to be a much braver thing to admit to a failure than any type of success... bravo sir bravo 👏👏👏

  • @quarkraven
    @quarkraven 3 года назад +5

    "there is such a thing as too tight" like a pommel, it must fit rightly.

  • @masterix4021
    @masterix4021 3 года назад

    I made a wood scabbard for a knife of mine (lost the old leather one in the ether of time and probably my messy cellar). What worked for me pretty well were two things.
    1) I made the entry way of the scabbard rather tight for the spot of the knife that sits there when it is fully inside.
    2) I used a thin leather strap on the edge walls to have some sort of filler material which can grab the knife when inside (although this might not be ideal as the knife will always have contact at the edge when moving in and out).

  • @lordnul1708
    @lordnul1708 3 года назад +15

    Novice collectors and non-craftsmen: "Scabbards are incredibly easy to make, just carve out some wood and there you go!"
    People who actually made scabbards: "You have no idea how incorrect that is."

    • @Ranstone
      @Ranstone 3 года назад +1

      Just realized guns are easier to make than scabbards...

    • @Naluukti
      @Naluukti 3 года назад +3

      Basically any woodworking project...!

    • @lordnul1708
      @lordnul1708 3 года назад

      @@Naluukti yeah, if you screw up once, you gotta start pretty much from scratch depending on how much you start with.

    • @lmaolmoo4147
      @lmaolmoo4147 3 года назад +2

      @@Ranstone no. Maybe if you are "building" an 80% lower AR but that's about the same as "building" a PC. You're not actually making anything, you're putting shit together that you purchased. Watch capandball's video on the pedersoli factory that makes reproduction black powder firearms. Or actually go about and completely make a repeating firearm from scratch. The technical ability needed is immense.

    • @lordnul1708
      @lordnul1708 3 года назад

      @@lmaolmoo4147 i give you the handgonne (yes this one is a smaller version, but same basic principle applies)
      ruclips.net/video/e2arBtuyLb4/видео.html

  • @robertcaseydavis
    @robertcaseydavis 3 года назад +2

    THIS video is exactly the type of useful info I love from Skall.

  • @brianfuller7691
    @brianfuller7691 3 года назад +6

    Scabbrds were and are difficult to make well. My dad was quite good at making scabbards.

  • @mementomori4972
    @mementomori4972 3 года назад

    @Skallagrim. If you don't have access to woods that are not hygroscopic (won't shrink and swell), use woods, that are as dry, as they could possibly be (a very old piece, that was laying around somewhere for years) Those woods won't shrink as much (but they can swell). If you seal the end grain of the wood, It will react allot less to humidity changes in the air. If you don't have access to woods, that contain no tannin (like poplar), you can use a liner (thin suede leather, which you can oil after gluing it in place) to prevent a reaction with the metal of the blade (rust).

  • @johnfitzalan3128
    @johnfitzalan3128 3 года назад +21

    I always found it ironic that with so many British sword makers the one called Albion is from the US.

    • @functionatthejunction
      @functionatthejunction 3 года назад +8

      If Albion Blades is based in the US, someone should make like "Washington Eagle Scabbards" and base it in Glastonbury.

    • @BaronVonQuiply
      @BaronVonQuiply 3 года назад +4

      @@functionatthejunction 'Mericutlass. We're making 'Mericutlasses.

  • @Priapos93
    @Priapos93 Год назад

    Thanks for the tips! I am currently planning to make a couple of scabbards. I've read that the traditional viking scabbard had from inside to outside, layers of wool, wood, wool, and leather. I hope that the wool felt layers will help keep the compression from causing issues, but I'll learn from your mistakes, and leave a little more room for contraction than I would have prior to watching this. Especially so, since I am planning to stem bend the wood around half the cross-section.

  • @tttITA10
    @tttITA10 3 года назад +18

    3:45 - This completely unnecessary joke is funnier when you know what the latin word for "scabbard" is.

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede 3 года назад +4

      In german the word is 'Scheide' which is a scabard for your sword and a 'scabard for your gladius' ;)

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 3 года назад +1

      @@Seelenschmiede In other languages too.

    • @matt79de
      @matt79de 3 года назад +1

      @@Seelenschmiede I should add that the same is true for "sheath": You'll always end up with a "Scheide" 🤣

  • @guypierson5754
    @guypierson5754 3 года назад +1

    My entire experience of making a sheath was in.... the 80's I wanna say? My tacknife sheath was super bulky and I'm from a very hot place: no heavy duty clothes to disapear the sheath into, and I needed the knife almost daily, so I made myself a soft sheath from old jeans.
    To prevent the blade cutting thru the denim I put 5mm x 5mm pine peices up the "front" I guess and sewed them in, so the blade edge never touched anything but wood but when the knife was out the sheath could fold/twist/roll as if fully fabric. Wore that in my shorts for a decade nearly and no-one noticed it around the place, least the coppers never did.

  • @Asghaad
    @Asghaad 3 года назад +3

    "it takes too much time to do by hand" is kinda moot excuse these days when CnC mills, laser cutting and 3D printing is a thing.

  • @rakdoss8455
    @rakdoss8455 3 года назад

    That Works recently released a video of Ilya’s most recent katana build and he goes into great detail on how the scabbard was made. The point you mention about the open bottom is actually valid. In a katana scabbard (Saya) there is a small channel cut a couple of inches below the tip exactly for excess moisture to gather. The scabbard is also not flush to the blade, there’s a fair bit of wiggle room. It pinches the blade at the hilt and at the tip because of the wood reacting with the steel. There is also a metal or horn material at the opening to protect the hand from the blade if you do a draw cut.
    Humidity also greatly affects the wood, especially if it’s cheap ply or MDF etc, as the glue hydrates the wood and then contracts when it dries, it makes the wood bend. A better way to apply the glue is to do a light brush on both contacts (in theory it will contract on both contacts, helping to cancel out) and compress together. I’ve also heard that some scabbards were lined with cloth or silk to help protect the blade from moisture but I can’t confirm this.

  • @paxonite-7bd5
    @paxonite-7bd5 3 года назад +4

    So there is a demand for custom scabbards for Albion swords this is intresting. With mordern devices imagine the types of prints you can apply on your scarbbards. All the cool designs or pictures..
    Oh god

  • @mrmcgrath96
    @mrmcgrath96 2 года назад

    Just got a Kern from Albion and it's a beauty. I finally understand what you meant by high quality historical recreations feel different, it's so light I thought it was stolen out of the box when it arrived because it felt empty. Compared to the Diphos there's practically no stress on the wrist and it's so nimble in the hand.

  • @vanillaflavoured5735
    @vanillaflavoured5735 3 года назад +5

    Collab with Todds workshop. He makes scabbards for Albion

  • @Michasu13
    @Michasu13 3 года назад

    Such a thin tight fit isn't easy so I am genuinely impressed. The first scabbard I made was a nightmare of an experience and ended with it cracking at the seam. The second one came out better but it's pretty chunky. Haven't added leather and honestly I'm thinking of painting and just adding metal fittings. One thing I did find is sealing the wood with outdoor wood sealers, the kind for exterior doors and wooden decks, really helped with the humidity. Problem. Sorry long post but I like seeing other people make things it's a huge source of inspiration and it can give one ideas one wouldn't think of doing by themselves. Keep up the amazing work skal. Can't wait for the next one.

  • @Uwe040
    @Uwe040 3 года назад +6

    If you buy a gun, in most cases you don‘t get a fitting holster either.

    • @Incab
      @Incab 3 года назад +1

      And after you buy one finding one that fits isn't easy either. "Made for.." means not yours.

    • @Bourikii2992
      @Bourikii2992 3 года назад

      Except you can buy a 150 dollar gun and it will 99.999999% not explode into a million pieces or fly off the handle and kill the neighbourhood stray.

    • @Uwe040
      @Uwe040 3 года назад

      @@Bourikii2992 But it could be less reliable, especially if you cheap out on ammo. But who am i to talk, I need to spend more than a 1 grand just to get the license to buy a gun...

  • @xqiuvmah
    @xqiuvmah 3 года назад

    A router is a scabbard makers best friend. Trace the outline of you blade on the wood, set the depth to the maximum thickness of the blade and start removing material. Another tip, heavily oil the inside of the scabbard with mineral oil before assembly. This will help prevent rust from forming on the blade. Also if you are going to cover the scabbard with leather or twine, just use wood staples to hold it together. They work well and won't be an eyesore if it's covered

  • @dieseluk2k
    @dieseluk2k 3 года назад +3

    A fail is just...
    First
    Attempt
    In
    Learning

  • @forkliftwizard
    @forkliftwizard 3 года назад

    I made a scabbard carved in two halves from poplar (For a Dirk, not a sword), fit to the blade with a bit of masking tape over it to leave space.
    Didn't glue it together, did lacing over it with coreless paracord in a kinda herringbone pattern. Snug enough it can be held upside down without falling out, but not difficult to draw.
    Not sure if it would work as well for a sword, but I'm certain it would be a tremendous amount of work.

  • @padalan2504
    @padalan2504 3 года назад +14

    Alternate title for the first 2 minutes: Sword hipster tries to defend a company for selling a product worth 5 months of labour without a case for said product.
    Yep, a little too long.

  • @Sk0lzky
    @Sk0lzky 3 года назад

    Really useful video, sharing potential problems one can encounter is invaluable regardless of the project. I've only ever made synthetic and leather sheathes (for knives) and no tutorials/self-teaching courses mentioned things that could go wrong, which made me waste a lot of material, it's similar with wooden scabbard ones, they make it look ridiculously simple, if labour intensive, and if I tried making one without your video I'd probably end up exactly where you are (now I can find a different way to screw up :D)

  • @JP-rf8rr
    @JP-rf8rr 3 года назад +8

    I'd rather have a cheap leather scabbard than no scabbard.

    • @radiatedronnie2855
      @radiatedronnie2855 3 года назад

      Pure leather is not great on a blade, tanine is fairly corrosive, which is also why you should avoid woods containing it, such as oak.

    • @sebmuckerheide1133
      @sebmuckerheide1133 3 года назад

      @@radiatedronnie2855 how bad is vegetable tan leather? I'm still new to leather making, and I've put veg tan leather for sheaths and they don't seem to xorode the blade.

    • @radiatedronnie2855
      @radiatedronnie2855 3 года назад

      @@sebmuckerheide1133 I don't know. Try something that's not too acidic. I vegetable tanned works great,

  • @iHateJoemama
    @iHateJoemama 3 года назад

    I like to wrap painters tape on the blade, wrap it again in paper towel> shrink wrap> epoxy> leather or more epoxy with /without re-inforcment. You can go further and make it fancy. If you want it to be tighter you dont need the paper towel and instead just use extra layers of tape or shrink wrap. No power tools required and if your looking for epoxy/ resin princess auto/ harbor freight has it.

  • @JackSilver1410
    @JackSilver1410 3 года назад

    One thing that worked well for me, (though, there are some obvious caveats) make the scabbard a bit more loose. More loose even than to just counter contraction, like the sword is rattling around in there. Then, pad the interior. A touch of glue to keep a couple pads of felt seated within. It's much softer so even if the space is "too small" the blade will be held snugly, but not too tight. Finish the pads with a drop or two of oil now and then to mare sure they aren't collecting moisture and help keep the blade oiled at the same time.
    I've not done this for a full sized sword, but it worked well with one of the larger Moraknivs and a hefty bowie.

  • @Ben_the_Ignorant
    @Ben_the_Ignorant 3 года назад

    If you make the scabbard as two detachable pieces maintenance and cleaning are so much easier. Plus, lining the inside with wool kept slightly wet with oil keeps the steel free form rust and makes for a silent and smooth draw without too much friction.

  • @patrickbrett66
    @patrickbrett66 3 года назад

    With a loose scabbard you can line the opening with some sheeps skin, the wool helps to keep the blade oiled and it also pinches the blade a little bit but not enough to bind it, ideally you would build your scabbard with the sheeps wool in mind. I have about a 2 inche strip of sheeps skin on the opening to my sword sheith and it does the same thing, on and for clarity sake the wool goes next to the blade and the leather gets stuck to the sword sheith / scabbard.

  • @slowguy66
    @slowguy66 3 года назад +1

    I have a bastard sword I made that I’ve been really wanting to make a scabbard for but haven’t quite figured out how to tackle it this video has kind of helped me

  • @jacobmichael1911
    @jacobmichael1911 3 года назад

    As someone who plans to eventually make a sheath or scabbard of some kind for a few single-handed axes, this was very informative. Thank you.

  • @benjaminbreeg6214
    @benjaminbreeg6214 3 года назад

    I really appreciate you making this, your home made experiments are probably exactly the kind of thing people did back in the day

  • @El_Chompo
    @El_Chompo 3 года назад

    I miss your workshop so much. It was so fun watching you build things, and seeing your prototypes and improvements over time.

  • @michaele8157
    @michaele8157 3 года назад

    Massive help. Im so glad i watcged this first. Ive done alot of kydex work but never leather or wood

  • @logoseven3365
    @logoseven3365 3 года назад

    I have a machete I brought back from Jamaica in the 80’s. Whole lotta good hikes. Always wanted a scabbard. I think I will try this

  • @MravacKid
    @MravacKid 3 года назад

    I feel your pain. I made the sheath for my sword (blunt practice weapon, not sharp) from a single piece of leader folded over and stitched on one side, also without considering possible shrinkage. Thankfully leather is softer than wood, so with a bit of effort I *can* jam it in all the way, though not easily or quickly. :)

  • @MonkeyJedi99
    @MonkeyJedi99 3 года назад

    Thank you for sharing your work, your mistakes, and your thoughts.
    And let the scabbard maker who has NEVER messed up throw the first stone!

  • @espositogregory
    @espositogregory 3 года назад

    Before you add the last broad plate of the wood scabbard, glue or otherwise affix some fabric or synthetic material inside. You can also keep the blade in the built scabbard/sheath, as long as you wrap it in tape or cellophane first

  • @smashallpots1428
    @smashallpots1428 3 года назад

    ive havent made a scabbard for a sword but i have made multiple scabbards for knives and a nada-esque chopping thing which had like an 11x3 inch blade and i made them all with the carving the cavity method all of them fit perfectly tight with no wobble and they wont fall out if held upside down but can be drawn with no effort

  • @mgn567
    @mgn567 3 года назад +1

    cool and interesting video! maybe by putting a strip of leather all around the interior of the scabbard where the cutting edge is and adding cloth to the two interior sides it will keep the blade from moving but also allow for expansion differences?
    or maybe just the strip of leather in contact with the cutting edge all around the scabbard will prevent it from moving even though there is space on the two flat sides of the blade? but it would only work for straight blades.
    (sorry for any mistakes i'm still learning english)

  • @StSubZero
    @StSubZero 2 года назад

    When it comes to scabbard making, even with toy swords it can be a challenge. Plenty of them (especially those with katana motifs) come with one out of the box, but for more European designs coming with a scabbards is less common, be it a wood sword or plastic. Often times those will have pegs on the plastic ones to help retain a piece of plastic shaped into a scabbard molded from the same bit as the sword.
    But for wooden swords or plastic swords without scabbards, I've made one for one of those renaissance festival types. Praise God that a cardboard tube from a TP roll fit onto it perfectly at the base. Then one has to attach a paper towel tube with a little bit of masking or painters tape (do NOT use duct tape, too thick). Then depending on how long your sword is, add a second one and tape up and cut the end into a triangle if desired. THEN you spiral wrap with colored duct tape At the base first and work your way down. It's preferred to use the same color as the handle to make the sword match it. I chose duct tape instead of paint since it provides both color and structure strength at the same time. Afterwards, you're not quite done. The trick to any good scabbard, be it for a real sword or a toy, is to be tight enough to not fall out of the scabbard if you hold it upside down. Thus you'll want to play with it for a bit, until the cardboard properly settles and until the duct tape tightening up with extra layers on the base (the base being closer to where it touches the hilt, and do this WITH the sword inside) until you get to a pleased balance between secure and loose. I also added more loops just above the base of the scabbard, so as to allow a leather loop I have to hold it securely in the gap in the tape.
    Thus if you all want to make a scabbard for your own wood swords, in short, use a tube or two, or in my case, three.

  • @plutodrake81
    @plutodrake81 3 года назад

    Actually there is a quite simple method from the 13th century for making a scabbard. 2 slabs of strong wood veneer are covered on one side with goat pelt. (it helps to retain the sword, scrubs rust and holds some oil very well.) this is then wrapped with linen wraps and coated with boneglue. keep your blade inside to imprint the form. after taht cover it with leather. If you wish i can add some photos of the scabbard i made like this a few years ago. it holds my sword still very nicly and never had any problem with rust beause i kept it in the scabbard to long.
    Greetings from Germany, keep it up. sorry for my klunky english
    Thomas

  • @jannevellamo
    @jannevellamo 2 года назад

    If your wooden scabbard gets a little too tight when it dries, you can try taking a perfectly ordinary file and filing the inside of the scabbard to measure. Alternatively, you can take a long strip of metal or wood, glue some sandpaper onto it and sand the inside, till you have a perfect fit. Wood contracts when it dries, so the fit is hardly ever perfect, even when your measurements are. Leather also contracts after glueing, so if you line your scabbard with leather, you'll have too tight a scabbard again, but you can sort that out by using the above method again. For a flashier scabbard, you may want to try lining it with a fancy fabric, such as velvet or silk, which may match your period clothing, if you like that kind of thing. Fabrics do not contract much when they dry and they're easier than leather to work with.

  • @Matt_The_Hugenot
    @Matt_The_Hugenot 3 года назад

    Love the warts and all approach this channel has taken since the beginning. Never change, Skall.

  • @24934637
    @24934637 7 месяцев назад

    Great vid, thank you! Once I've finished making my sword (just waiting for some decent weather to do the heat treatment at this point), I'm going to have to make the scabbard, and it's always better to learn from the mistakes of others! Much appreciated......I'll have to find my own mistakes to make now LOL

  • @nicklaustracey254
    @nicklaustracey254 3 года назад

    Dealing with such thin peices of wood you will probably have more pronounced warping and swelling, relative to thicker peices. Probably why your scabbard lost just enough form to wedge your sword.
    Just a guess, but you may want do a rough cut for your peices, oil them (I would try linseed oil), cut to shape, oil them again, test fit before gluing, assemble (you may need to lightly sand the areas you need to glue), and possibly a light oiling after that (exterior only). It would add 2-3 Three days to the build depending on how many times you oiled and and what oil you used.
    Linseed oil is good at blocking moisture, penetrates fairly deep, may help displace some of the moisture already in the wood, and has soft plastic like qualities once fully dried.
    You may also want to look into the best wood to use as thin peices.

  • @essenkillerthezombiektz5026
    @essenkillerthezombiektz5026 3 года назад

    7:10 ive done this method twice once for a push dagger once for a machete and for the machete i just used a router to cut the blade shape out took like 30 minutes and it was an ok fit for my first scabbard and it was a bit curved
    edit: I did measure the thickness of it tho so i could just right away get the right thickness taken off so that helped a lot

  • @toectter8886
    @toectter8886 3 года назад

    I have been wanting a Albion for awhile. Though something always seems to pop up that eats into my slush fund. Such is life.
    Now to scabbards. At least once while shopping Albion,probably a few years back now (they seem to have changed their web page design at some point) they did offer two choices for scabbards made by outside tradesmen. With the link to either being on their home page iirc. Each offered numerous options,all options had wood core as standard. With various options such as felt inner lining brass buckles,colors,one point,two point or three point belt hangers. Amazing really the choices and options offered. I believe the price point began at $500US for a basic wood core and leather and additional options pushing the price at $50US per option choice. I know that some of the Albion swords could be ordered with the scabbard since the maker must of had some predetermined patterns while other models would need to be shipped to the maker first to have the proper fit.
    Same can be said of Sonny at Valiant. You can ship him a sword and he will craft a scabbard. Can not recall price point but there is I believe a 3-6 month turn around.

  • @cnug313217
    @cnug313217 3 года назад

    sometimes you can expand wood by soaking it in linseed oil, the oil refills the places where water once was. its the proper way to fix a slightly lose hammer or ax head. another thing that might work is stemming the wood and forcing it to expand with a steel blank, thin soaking it in linseed oil.
    one thing you might want to try is instead of making the whole scabbard tight to the blade you make ridges or bumps on the inside that hold the blade tight in a 4 or so places i think your problem is friction not just shrinkage.

  • @williambarnes274
    @williambarnes274 3 года назад

    I have two Gladius'. I have built scabbards for both. Both were successful. Both were fun. I built a basic shape from a 1×2 piece of lathe wood. Then utilized my router to shape the inside. Repeating the shape on another piece. I had built my frames on a much larger scale. However I did not glue anything. I had an old leather trench coat. Using tiny boot nails I drew the leather across the wooden frame and tacked the edges together. With a second wrap in stretched leather I then used a pine resin and final tac to wrap the frame.

  • @jonathanpohlhammer6246
    @jonathanpohlhammer6246 3 года назад

    I have two WW1 era kukris arriving today. I plan on making wooden dap (the traditional name for the kukri scabbard) for them both and gifting one to my wife so we can have a set. I've made leather sheaths in the past, but this will be my first time with wood. Thanks for sharing your errors. Mistakes are valuable lessons. Wish me luck!

  • @Lucius1958
    @Lucius1958 3 года назад

    I have made a couple/three scabbards/sheaths: two wooden scabbards for Bornean "mandaus" (or "parang ilang"), and a leather sheath for a 17th c. smallsword.
    The smallsword sheath should probably have had a wooden interior; but I did not know that at the time. I used a single piece of leather, forming it around the blade, and stitching it at the back; then I fabricated a brass chape, and a brass piece at the top, with a hook for a swordbelt (which I also made). The sheath, although limp, seems to work fairly well.
    The mandau scabbards were hollowed out from within (the lateral curve of the blades required rather a wide aperture), and were glued together and bound with rattan. I also carved & ornamented the exteriors in imitation of the native style. (One blade, which was plainer, had its original, beautifully carved hilt; the other blade, with beautiful filigree work on the back, did not. I attempted to create a hilt for it; but I was forced to use domestic white-tail antler, instead of the proper _Rusa unicolor_, which is now a protected species. Hence that hilt has a rather ungainly curve; also, I did not have the material or skill to properly recreate the hilt binding).
    Both mandau scabbards use cord belts bound to the wood, with staghorn toggles.

  • @H4FF
    @H4FF 3 года назад

    I think this is great content. Even for those who are aware of the expansion and contraction of wood, or how bad it can be, this is still great information. My dad does mainly wood work combined with some other stuff, and his workshop has very stable temperatures and is very dry. It's something I have learned through him, but I would never have actually seen how much a scabbard might contract without you posting this video. Again, very useful, great content.

  • @gerardbabinusmc-davscotish3871
    @gerardbabinusmc-davscotish3871 3 года назад

    A layer of tape on the blade, protects from moisture . If applied prior to dimensioning, it will also slightly increase the scabbard to acommodate the blade preventing the "tightening effect you encountered.