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Heraldry

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Colours = Tinctures
The basic colour palette:
The two metals are silver and gold
(white and yellow)
The stains in order of
frequency, red, blue, black and green. Other colours can be
found occasionally in heraldry, most often to make a more
realistic image. For example brown is sometimes used for the
trunk of a tree, purple for grapes etc.
The colours are represented by different
patterns of hatching when shown in black and white. The
hatchings are often carved into stone representations of arms.
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Silver = White =Argent |
Gold
= Yellow = Or |
Red =
Gules |
Blue
= Azure |
Black
= Sable |
Green
= Vert |
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Purple = Purpure (rare) |
Orange = Orange (rare) |
Brown
= Tenné (rare) |
Blood
Red = Sanguine (rare) |
Mulberry = Murrey (rare) |
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Furs
In addition to the colours,
there are two types of fur which are commonly used to fill
areas of the shield. The first, ermine, is a representation
of the coat of a stoat in winter colouring - white with a
black tail. Other colour varieties of ermine are purely
graphical inventions. The second type of fur used, was that
of a squirrel, with a blue/grey back and white underbelly.
Various different ways of cutting and stitching the skins
together result in the varieties of vair and potent
patterns.
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Ermine |
Ermines or Counter Ermine |
Erminois |
Pean |
Vair |
Counter Vair |
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Vair-en-pale |
Vair-en-point |
Potent |
Counter Potent |
Potent-en-pale |
Potent-en-point |
Divisions of the Field
The shield is often divided
up into two or more areas along standard lines. Each area
can then be coloured in a different manner to "difference"
it from a similar shield, or for purposes of "marshalling" -
combining coats-of-arms to produce a new one. Some of the
divisions shown below are much less common than others.
Lines of Division
The lines dividing the shield are
usually straight (with the obvious exceptions like flaunches, bordures
etc.). Many additional variations can be created by using undulating
lines. These lines may also be used on the edges of the ordinaries. The
most common versions are shown below:
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Engrailed |
Invected |
Wavy |
Nebuly |
Indented |
Dancetty |
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Embattled |
Embattled Counter-Embattled |
Bretessed |
Dovetailed |
Potenty |
Urdy |
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Raguly |
Raguly Counter-Raguly |
Rayonné
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Fir trees |
Fir twig |
Cotised |
Basics of Heraldry
Charges
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