I do french military sabre, it's really interesting to see the similarities between that and your reconstructed drills ! Great video. Also, will you dive a bit into arming sword with shield ?
What is the blade length on your arming sword? And what is the make? Lastly, brief review. Thanks.. I am in the market, but I can’t quite decide on a maker/model. I’m also concerned about blade length. What is too short, what is too long? Also, what gloves are you using? I only have claw gauntlets and am trying to decide on a safe sparring/comp glove. Thanks!!
@@theforestgiant4362 this is the sword review: th-cam.com/video/RIL85P2sJgo/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared For the gloves, check in the comment section of the first episode of the series. I linked the maker, now I unable to fo it.
Well, the first two things you mentioned are basically an outcome of handling the weapon in different ways. That's why I gave a poste system to begin with. The upper vs lower body will come later.
@@FedericoMalagutti Well I mean is what I call working on a fluid grip....you play with the longitudinal axis of the sword on respect to the hand/wrist....but you also get a feel and differences from different grips...hammer grip vs handshake grip and even pistol grip obviously making it clear is for exercise purposes....But I also work with the grip on it s self.... keeping it close and learning to move the pressure or strength from a group of fingers to the next. This is probably more straight forward with one handed bladed weapons , but it also translates to two handed. (Which is not the topic lol)
@@FedericoMalagutti it is right, but I mean acts that can bring double moves. For example, in sport epee we can see double circle 6-th guard that we can be used for attack or parad-riposte. Could something similar be useful in this weapon?
@@АртемМоисеев-ю1щ yes but only few forms are easy to execute, not every circle parry. There’s far more mass to move and the weight forward makes harder to land some. Half circle ones are slightly easier instead.
@@FedericoMalagutti indeed, but what about roverso mezzano guard? I suppose that this act can be very useful in case when we do double movement for protect ourselves. And, way of blade let us do it fast.
You are a true swordsman. The best HEMA practitioner on TH-cam. I train Kenjutsu but I come here to learn your excellent techniques.
@@UltimateTruthChannel thank you very much!
@@FedericoMalaguttiohhh... you have ! i don't know why buy youtube didn't notify me 😔 I appolagise for not noticing ! Thank you for your answer !
@@alinvid6098 don’t worry. If there’s something it doesn’t work on TH-cam are notifications for sure
Let's make the arming sword relevant again!!!
Keep up the good work!
@@Zodd83 thanks!!!!
Even if I don't do sword fighting, this is a great video to entertain myself.
Thanks!
I really like this training methodology. Discovering the movement's your self through focused shadowboxing is huge. Thanks for making this.
@@beroulga I’m happy you are enjoying it! Thanks
Excited for more!
Very useful! ⚔️
I do french military sabre, it's really interesting to see the similarities between that and your reconstructed drills ! Great video. Also, will you dive a bit into arming sword with shield ?
@@emmanueleustache4715 after the arming sword alone, yes ;-)
What is the blade length on your arming sword? And what is the make?
Lastly, brief review. Thanks.. I am in the market, but I can’t quite decide on a maker/model. I’m also concerned about blade length. What is too short, what is too long?
Also, what gloves are you using? I only have claw gauntlets and am trying to decide on a safe sparring/comp glove. Thanks!!
@@theforestgiant4362 this is the sword review: th-cam.com/video/RIL85P2sJgo/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
For the gloves, check in the comment section of the first episode of the series. I linked the maker, now I unable to fo it.
I would add , different grips , different angles in relation to the shoulder height and then the upper body and lower body dissociation.
Well, the first two things you mentioned are basically an outcome of handling the weapon in different ways. That's why I gave a poste system to begin with.
The upper vs lower body will come later.
@@FedericoMalagutti Well I mean is what I call working on a fluid grip....you play with the longitudinal axis of the sword on respect to the hand/wrist....but you also get a feel and differences from different grips...hammer grip vs handshake grip and even pistol grip obviously making it clear is for exercise purposes....But I also work with the grip on it s self.... keeping it close and learning to move the pressure or strength from a group of fingers to the next. This is probably more straight forward with one handed bladed weapons , but it also translates to two handed. (Which is not the topic lol)
@@417hemaspringfieldmo check this out:
th-cam.com/video/r2lNv-_hurQ/w-d-xo.html
I asked last time and I ask again Where can I buy gloves like yours ?
@@alinvid6098 well I have answered to your message in theory, check it out
We are talking about historical fencing, but how about look at modern technique (from sport epee with it's circle guards) in this weapon?
@@АртемМоисеев-ю1щ well, everything similar is already there.
@@FedericoMalagutti it is right, but I mean acts that can bring double moves. For example, in sport epee we can see double circle 6-th guard that we can be used for attack or parad-riposte. Could something similar be useful in this weapon?
@@АртемМоисеев-ю1щ yes but only few forms are easy to execute, not every circle parry. There’s far more mass to move and the weight forward makes harder to land some.
Half circle ones are slightly easier instead.
@@FedericoMalagutti indeed, but what about roverso mezzano guard? I suppose that this act can be very useful in case when we do double movement for protect ourselves. And, way of blade let us do it fast.