On 28 Mar at 16:30, Domenico Cervasi <
3gull...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm starting to write the blazon for my personal coat-of-arms. I'm not
> employed by a government or religious institution, but am
> self-employed. And I'm not a merchant as I sell no merchandise, but
> provide a service to the public.
>
> I'm considering all this because, to start, I don't know what elements
> of the blazon to exclude.
Everything can be excluded except, perhaps, the shield tincture. So I
don't know what you are talking of.
> I suppose heraldic traditions, old and new, where I live in the United
> States and where my ancestors are from in Sicily may provide some
> guidance.
Some of the traditions are dreadful. Bad traditions are bad
taskmasters.
> I'm writing here because I don't trust businesses selling
> armorials online.
Touching a raw nerve? Without much fear of contradiction I would guess
that all participants in this group do not trust the online vendors or
even their predecessors, the mall vendors.
> The samples they depict are very elaborate and generally have militant
> themes.
Have you looked at Francois Velde's site <
http://www.heraldica.org> or
Brian Timms' <
http://www.briantimms.fr>? Much better.
>
> I want my arms to be meaningful to me personally. It's not so
> important for them to be extravagant.
Never heard of extravagance as a feature of heraldry. Obviously you
should create some arms which are attractive to you. The other thing to
remember is not to duplicate anyone else's arms as they are supposed to
be unique graphical identifiers. Though I suspect duplication only
applies to whatever heraldic province you live in; people in different
countries can have the same arms and yet still be, countrywise, unique.
Let us know what you come up with.
--
Tim Powys-Lybbe
t...@powys.org
for a miscellany of bygones:
http://powys.org/