Sir Ian:
Thank you again for the reply. May I say how very much I've enjoyed watching your YouTube videos. I hope we become good friends. As for history, here's my take on it - I want to conform to a historically appropriate look. By that, I mean that I want to fit in with my fellow knights should I ever get my hands on a flux capacitor and travel back through time. With that said, I have no problem with my armour being made with modern techniques and better materials than were available in the past.
I am quite a fan of the harness I see German knights wear, but I do not like the Sallet style helmet. Do you know if these types of harnesses were ever worn with close helms? If not, what styles did use the close helm? I am not sure if I'm indulging in pure fantasy, but in my mind, the close helm is what I think of when I think of a knight in plate armour.
Thank you again for your thought and your patience. I very much hope to meet you in the near future and to talk about these things in detail.
Respectfully,
Edward
It's my pleasure. To answer your question about the Close Helm, the typical 'Knight in Shining Armor,' with a close helm usually evokes images of guys like this:
Unfortunately, this is not medieval armor. It dates to the mid 16th century and is very much Renaissance Armor, contemporary to the Tudor Period in England. There's nothing wrong with that, it's just important you realize it's a shift from the Medieval Era into the Renaissance.
The Sallet on the other hand comes about in the middle decades of the 15th century in both German and Italian forms, and is indeed Medieval Armor. It is most normally associated with Late Medieval German Gothic harness. An Italian Milanese Armet based harness is also a mid 15th century Medieval Style of armor and shares more stylistic elements in common with the Close Helm. Again, for the sake of full disclosure, in order to commission a quality late Medieval German Gothic armor, I promise you, you could potentially blow through a $3,000 budget on a high-end Sallet and Cuirass alone. Historically shaped plate armor is expensive, no way around it. You can certainly get into less than 'living history quality' plate armor for cheaper sums, but you will definitely compromise things like historical shaping, high quality hardened steel, etc... You will also want your armor to be custom fit to your body, and in turn be wearing arming garments custom tailored to you.
The image you originally posted of the kneeling knight in mail, from the Westminster Psalter dates to 1250, and predates the Milanese and German Gothic styles of late medieval plate by about 200 years. The nice thing about getting into a mail harness though, is a high quality, historical mail harness can be had for much less money than its late Medieval plate counterpart. The other nice thing about mail harness, is that a lot of the work can be done by you. Making high quality plate armor requires a very highly skilled armorer, but with mail you can purchase off-the-rack, put in the blood/sweat/tears yourself and tailor it over time to your body and arming garments.
I'm not trying to dissuade you from choosing one path or the other, I just want you to understand what you're getting in to.