European Medieval Greaves with Sabatons-Solleretes Low-poly 3D model

European Medieval Greaves with Sabatons-Solleretes Low-poly 3D model

cgtrader

A greave (from the Old French greve shin, shin armour) or jambeau is a piece of armour that protects the leg. Greaves were common until around the 9th century AD, when they largely disappeared from use. The first evidence of their reappearance is in the 1230s or 1250s. Illustrations showing “closed greaves”, or greaves that protected the entire leg first appear around 1290 and become popular in the 1320s. Closed or full greaves are made of two plates joined on the outside by hinges and fastening with buckles and straps on the inside. Full greaves were used from the mid- 14th century all the way though the late medieval period. Sabatons or solleretes, are is part of a knight's body armor that covers the foot. Fourteenth and fifteenth century sabatons typically end in a tapered point well past the actual toes of the wearer's foot, following fashionable shoe shapes of the fourteenth century. Sabatons of the first half of sixteenth century end at the tip of the toe and may be wider than the actual foot. They were the first piece of armour to be put on, and were made of riveted iron plates called lames. Historically accurate game ready asset modeled in Blender and high quality PBR (Diffuse/Metallic/Roughness/Normal_OpenGL) textures in Substance Painter at 4k 2k and 1k resolution and subdivision ready for different LOD implementations, at FBX and OBJ and .blend files to work with any 3D software.

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