Difference between revisions of "Cuir Bouilli"
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+ | ===Relating to [[Armor]] and [[Leather]]=== | ||
+ | Sometimes called Hardened Leather. | ||
+ | ===From the [[Rulebook]]=== | ||
+ | is the process by which leather is hardened using wax or other treatments to produce significantly harder leather. This gives one bonus [[Armor Points|armor point]] [[Category:Rulebook Terms]] | ||
+ | ===In History=== | ||
[[Image:2000.66.L.jpg|thumb|Extant [[Coat of Scales]] made of hardened leather]] | [[Image:2000.66.L.jpg|thumb|Extant [[Coat of Scales]] made of hardened leather]] | ||
Cuir Bouilli is a means of making hardened and stiffened [[leather]]. Although there is some disagreement among some leatherworkers as to how this is accomplished, there is a significant amount of evidence to think that it was done by molding wet vegetable tanned leather. This leather can be formed into any number of forms, which, on drying, will retain that shape. The wet leather can be set more firmly by drying it under moderate heat, the degree of rigidity obtained being determined by the drying temperature. A faster method, which produces extremely hard and rigid shapes, is to dip the molded leather into boiling water for anywhere from 20 to 120 seconds. This technique causes the partial melting of the fixed tannin aggregates in the leather, making them plastic, causing them to flow and redistribute themselves throughout the fiber network of the leather. On cooling, the fibers become embedded in what can best be called a tough, three-dimensional, polymer network or resin, somewhat similar to the materials made by condensing formaldehyde with substances such as phenol, urea or melamine. | Cuir Bouilli is a means of making hardened and stiffened [[leather]]. Although there is some disagreement among some leatherworkers as to how this is accomplished, there is a significant amount of evidence to think that it was done by molding wet vegetable tanned leather. This leather can be formed into any number of forms, which, on drying, will retain that shape. The wet leather can be set more firmly by drying it under moderate heat, the degree of rigidity obtained being determined by the drying temperature. A faster method, which produces extremely hard and rigid shapes, is to dip the molded leather into boiling water for anywhere from 20 to 120 seconds. This technique causes the partial melting of the fixed tannin aggregates in the leather, making them plastic, causing them to flow and redistribute themselves throughout the fiber network of the leather. On cooling, the fibers become embedded in what can best be called a tough, three-dimensional, polymer network or resin, somewhat similar to the materials made by condensing formaldehyde with substances such as phenol, urea or melamine. |
Revision as of 16:30, 29 January 2009
Relating to Armor and Leather
Sometimes called Hardened Leather.
From the Rulebook
is the process by which leather is hardened using wax or other treatments to produce significantly harder leather. This gives one bonus armor point
In History
Cuir Bouilli is a means of making hardened and stiffened leather. Although there is some disagreement among some leatherworkers as to how this is accomplished, there is a significant amount of evidence to think that it was done by molding wet vegetable tanned leather. This leather can be formed into any number of forms, which, on drying, will retain that shape. The wet leather can be set more firmly by drying it under moderate heat, the degree of rigidity obtained being determined by the drying temperature. A faster method, which produces extremely hard and rigid shapes, is to dip the molded leather into boiling water for anywhere from 20 to 120 seconds. This technique causes the partial melting of the fixed tannin aggregates in the leather, making them plastic, causing them to flow and redistribute themselves throughout the fiber network of the leather. On cooling, the fibers become embedded in what can best be called a tough, three-dimensional, polymer network or resin, somewhat similar to the materials made by condensing formaldehyde with substances such as phenol, urea or melamine.
The molding of leather was known in Saxon times in England, and was widely practiced during the middle ages in both England and on the Continent.