I figured I'd post up a few pics of some stuff from 10 years ago. I found my old thigh-high leather boots, which I'm going to chop down to mid-calf and use for my sabatons. I'm also about to sacrifice my old "the belt will hold it closed" gambeson from my SCA combat days, so I can re-purpose the blue closed cell foam from it for my current arming clothes & helmet.
You know you're at the height of fashion when you have blue foam visible through stretched black fabric, sewn with red stitching.
This is my old "leg harness holding belt", aka a weight belt with the kidney reinforcement removed.
My second attempt at a breastplate, back around 2000. It's 16 gauge, 304 (or 316?) stainless steel. I was lucky enough to have access to a full shop of tools, an SCA Armoring Laurel mentor (highest "grade" they give), and lots of fire and supervision. Unfortunately, it was only a couple times - and I don't have much skill, as the resulting breastplate is less than pretty.
My first attempt was so shameful I won't even post it. Picture a munitions grade breastplate. Now picture a large truck. Now picture that truck running over the breastplate...
Here is the first set of tassets I ever made (16 gauge mild), back in ... 96? 97? A couple years after I tried to upgrade from my "carpet and duct tape" cuirass I started with as an early teen into steel armor (no, I'm not joking).
The forming is really rough and basic. REALLY ROUGH. I used a 4x4 post that I hit with a sledgehammer a bunch of times to get a roughly rounded shape to hammer over, and then I hit it with a rubber mallet - turned sideways so that I was hitting with the rounded part and not the face. I cut the plates with about 14,372 jigsaw blades of my dad's that I broke before finally using a hammer and chisel, then grinding them to shape on the bench grinder. I finally saved up and bought the mis-matched, completely non-period sorta-italianish harness I have posted on facebook.
Looking back, my parents let me do some really weird stuff when I was younger. They're awesome.