Thank you both. Just a word of caution though. Even though this store's offerings are a vast improvement over off-the-rack offerings, it's still not properly tailored maille. For example there's no tailoring at the elbow to form cups or expansions in the armpits. The sleeve tapers, but it's still a tapering tube, not a properly formed and tailored sleeve. A real tailored maille sleeve shares a lot of the same tailoring features as the sleeve construction on that pourpoint you just made. It uses a lot of cleverly placed rings to build in a small cup and pre-bend in the elbow like the CdB sleeve.
To get that level of proper tailoring requires either a lot of money and actually finding someone willing to do it, or a lot of work on your own. My friend Tom Biliter just finished up a pair of properly tailored sleeves. They offer more flexibility at the elbow than any tube, tapered or not, can possibly allow. The tailoring on his were copied from an authentic sleeve in Wade Allen's collection that was marked up by Mac to show all the tailoring rings. Even though Tom's is a reproduction of just the detached sleeves, similar tailoring would go in to the sleeves on a haubergeon. A haubergeon would also include contraction and expansion in the body as well to correspond to the chest, waist, and hips.
So, for the prices we're used to paying for maille, Custom Chainmail is an awesome alternative to the off-the-rack stuff everyone uses, but it's still a couple tiers below the craftsmanship of properly tailored maille
I'm not trying to be ungrateful for the compliments, I just don't want people to think that the sleeve construction I'm wearing is perfectly accurate
That's how re-enactorisms are born, haha. To get an idea of what goes in to the proper tailoring of a sleeve here you can see the deep v cut on the left side of the image. That's the upper arm's elbow seam, just like on the CdB. That's how you get that "tailored in" bend. All the mess at the right of the image is how the armpit should be to allow freedom of movement:
And in this image you can see the final sleeve. The sleeve on top is Wade's authentic sleeve. The white twisty-ties are where Mac marked out the rings used to tailor it. The bottom sleeve is Tom's reproduction. The blacker rings are the rings he used to tailor it and correspond to the twisty-tied rings on Wade's original. Note the tailored-in bend in the elbow and gussets in the armpit to allow real freedom of movement.