Click here to view the MoAS officer report for the EK Curia held on 1/18/24.
Registration for Crown’s A&S Championship Competition Now Open!
(En français ci-dessous)
The MoAS Office and our current champions are excited to announce that registration for this year’s Crown’s A&S Championships is now open! Full information on format, accessibility information, links to register as a competitor, displayer, youth displayer, or judge, and more, can be found at https://moas.eastkingdom.org/display…/crowns-as-champions/
As previously shared, this year’s competition will be held in person with an online option for accessibility. The competition will take place in the Shire of Quintavia (Worcester, MA) on March 2, 2024.
In addition to the competition, the event will include a display space for artisans not taking part in the competition, as well as options for consultations for folks wishing to get in-person feedback.
More information about the event can be found at https://www.eastkingdom.org/
Mistress Amalie von Hohensee, EK MOAS
Mistress Cellach Dhonn Inghean Mhic an Mhadaidh, Sovereign’s A&S Champion
Syr Culann mac Cianain, Consort’s A&S Champion
En français:
L’Office du MoAS et nos champions actuels sont ravis d’annoncer que les inscriptions pour les championnats A&S de Crown de cette année sont désormais ouvertes ! Des informations complètes sur le format, les informations d’accessibilité, les liens pour s’inscrire en tant que compétiteur, démonstrateur, jeune démonstrateur ou juge, et plus encore, sont disponibles sur https://moas.eastkingdom.org/display…/crowns-as-champions/
Comme indiqué précédemment, le concours de cette année se déroulera en personne avec une option d’accessibilité en ligne. Le concours aura lieu dans la Comté de Quintavia (Worcester, MA) le 2 mars 2024.
En plus du concours, l’événement comprendra un espace d’exposition pour les artisans ne participant pas au concours, ainsi que des options de consultation pour les personnes souhaitant obtenir des commentaires en personne.
Plus d’informations sur l’événement peuvent être trouvées sur https://www.eastkingdom.org/event-details/?eid=4217
Mistress Amalie von Hohensee, EK MOAS
Mistress Cellach Dhonn Inghean Mhic an Mhadaidh, Sovereign’s A&S Champion
Syr Culann mac Cianain, Consort’s A&S Champion
Novice November Artisan Spotlights
Every Wednesday during the month of November, we will be featuring beginner projects from established artisans in the A&S community. Every artisan, no matter how advanced, was a beginner at some point in their A&S journey. We hope this blog series will encourage you to be gentle with your first tries!
Today’s featured artisans are: Mistress Vivian de Dunbar and Mistress Ysabel da Costa
Art form: spinning
Vivian’s Spinning Start:


What inspired you to try this art form?
I was a very avid crochet-er since I was a young girl. I was disappointed to find out it was not period when I joined the SCA so I went about looking for a replacement fiber art. I took a class at Pennsic University and fell in love with spinning.
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I was so amazed that I was able to do it at all. Like so many fiber arts, it is very easy to learn how to do it, but it takes a lot of practice to get good at it.
What was the hardest part of trying something new? What was the most fun?
The hardest thing for me was having an idea in my head of what type of yarn I was trying to create, and it was very frustrating to not be able to create it how I wanted. The fun part was trying out all the wonderfully different fibers. I went right from spinning wool to spinning silk. Even now there is always a new type of fiber for me to try.


Ysabel’s Spinning Start:


What inspired you to try this art form?
I wanted to make an embroidered object in the style of a particular museum piece from Bengal. The model is made with natural tussar silk floss on cotton fabric. Its unique beauty comes from the look and color of the undyed wild silk thread, which appears to be single-ply. I couldn’t find anything for sale that was correct for the project (I tried!), but unspun tussar silk fiber of good quality was available. So, although I had never done any spinning before, I eventually decided to try to spin my own embroidery floss.
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I bought a small amount of tussar silk fiber and a tahkli, which is an Indian-style supported hand spindle. I was reluctant to invest much money in supplies, as I wasn’t at all sure I would succeed. I was clumsy with the spindle, and the silk proved very difficult to draft with one hand, as required for the tahkli technique. I couldn’t understand how to manage it, and I almost gave up.
However, my tahkli came packaged with a sample of cotton punis (little rolags). Cotton is the fiber most commonly spun on the tahkli, so as a last resort, I tried spinning some cotton. It proved easier to draft than silk, and I was finally able to fill a spindle with thick, lumpy string. By this point, I was getting intrigued with spinning. I continued to practice with cotton for a few weeks, until I could produce a thread of fairly even thickness. When I returned to the silk, I was able to make some thread with it! My first silk thread was slubby and uneven, but it improved quickly with practice.
What was the hardest part of trying something new? What was the most fun?
The hardest part for me was just getting to square one. It was frustrating to have my materials keep clumping up or falling apart; it seemed impossible to manage drafting and spinning at the same time without one (or two!) extra hands. Once I succeeded in making some spun thread, however bad, it gave me a basis for improvement.
The most fun was completing my first skein of finished two-ply thread. It was only 15 yards long, but it looked like real thread, and I was so proud of it! Now I spin on a book charka (portable Indian spinning wheel) just for the pleasure of it. I find spinning meditative and relaxing. But it was certainly frustrating when I was first learning.
Artisan highlight from 11/22/23: Maistir Seamus na Coille Aosda
Art form: Pottery

What inspired you to try this art form?
This project was the final project that completed my work on a graduate certificate in Experimental Archeology and Material Culture from University College Dublin. It required making something, preferably in a material or craft with which I was unfamiliar. It built on my earlier research and presentation on the souterrain ware pottery of early medieval Ireland.
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I chose to do all the steps of pottery production from mining clay, processing the clay, coil building the pots, firing them in an open fire and using the surviving pots for cooking, eating, drinking and storage. Some steps like mining the clay were very simple and comfortable. Processing the clay and coil building the pots required repeated practice and reflection before I began to get a feel for it. I mean literally a feel for it. A feel for the plasticity of the clay, the stickiness, the grittiness of the temper, the thickness of a pot wall as I shaped it.
What was the hardest part of trying something new?
The hardest part was not being as skillful and sure working with the clay as I am working with other materials with which I have vastly more experience. From a distance it is obvious that I would be less skillful but in the moment it could be very frustrating. I managed this with frequent breaks, stepping away when I got particularly frustrated, being kind to myself and as the project progressed seeing the improvement in each new pot I made.
What was the most fun?
Sharing photos of my progress and failures with my SCA friends on Facebook and with my fellow students and faculty at UCD. That and cooking, eating and drinking from my own pots at The Endewearde Hunt.


Artisan highlight from 11/15/23: Baron Keziah Planchet
Art form: Illumination

What inspired you to try this art form?
I was inspired to play with illumination after intense encouragement from THL Robert of Stonemarche – I had been intending to involve myself with wordsmithing to assist him and other local scribes (I was doing a lot of opus anglicanum embroidery and short story writing at the time), but he insisted that I just hadn’t played with gouache yet and should give it a go. He was right. Gouache behaved like how a young-me had imagined paint would behave, and I took to it like a fish takes to water. I had looked with admiration at my SCA family’s scrolls my whole life, but for some reason that never had translated to “You could be a scribe” until that spring of 2017 at Robert’s craftnight in Concord. His support and enthusiasm was essential to me.
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I remember being a bit overwhelmed with the all-new-to-me-artform, but Robert sat me down and gave me sets of rules to work with – I like having boundaries in my art. I didn’t realize at the time how much came from his Laurel (and eventually, one of my Laurels) Master Harold von Auerbach. They both taught me ways of mixing my gouache, of ways to lay my colors down and to *always* start by tracing from extant illuminations (tracing is period!). The Scribes handbook was also a great resource. Keeping my eye on the very technical portions of the medium, like laying down the paint evenly, keeping the paper from buckling, matching the tints of different paints on extant illuminations, and also knowing the size of the original piece, kept me from overthinking the Big Picture of “People might see this and not like it”. I knew I was making my best attempt and that was better than no attempt, hands down.
What was the hardest part of trying something new? What was the most fun?
The hardest part of trying something new is always the “am I gonna be any good at it”? Imposter syndrome is rampant across the board. I don’t know if I would have been able to email the EK Signet eventually if Master Harold, as our baronial signet, hadn’t started me off with Blank scrolls. If memory serves, I didn’t even know one of my blanks was going out to the Kingdom until later, because he had just decided my work was ready, and sent it out with his calligraphy on it (all credit was given, once you give a blank over, you might not know where it ends up!) In this respect, having a Peer in the same art form, as well as apprentice siblings, helped keep me grounded and growing until I was confident in my own work enough to start teaching others and assisting in other scroll projects.


Artisan highlight from 11/8/23: Abu-Darzin Ibrahim ibn Musa bin Sulayman al-Rashid, Laureate
Art form: Nalbinding

What inspired you to try this art form?
I was first prompted to learn nalbinding in 2010 or so. Ostgardr would do a demo at the annual “Viking Day” Scandinavian festival in Brooklyn and I wanted to have something thematically appropriate to do at the demo. Since we had folks who were demonstrating spinning, weaving, embroidery and other fiber arts I thought nalbinding would be a useful addition. I knew very little about it (and some of what I thought I knew back then was wrong!).
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I soon learned that no one in our area knew how to do this craft, which made learning it a bit more difficult. There were also very few instructional books at the time and those that existed could be hard to find. I was able to find a couple of websites that had rudimentary instructions and managed to work things out from there.
What was the hardest part of trying something new? What was the most fun?
The hardest part of learning nalbinding was that I felt very much on my own. I feel like there are a lot more resources now (on social media, as well as more people in the SCA who can do in person teaching), but it may just be that it took me a while to find the resources that were out there. The most fun part was watching a three-dimensional object seemingly spring forth into existence in my hands.

Artisan highlight from 11/1/23: Master Nataliia Anastasiia Evgenova
Art form: Calligraphy

What inspired you to try this art form?
I was entering Artifacts of a Life, which was the first art event that I actually entered and competed in 2015. I was representing a female artist of the 16th century who was a member of an art guild and what she would have. One of them would be an artist contract. I had been looking into the artists of the time period and wanted to try and represent what a contract might look like and contain.
Describe your experience trying this new skill for the first time.
I bought some vellum, cut a quill, not very well, and purchased oak gall ink. I did some research on apprentice agreements as well as other legal agreements, and exemplars of written documents of the time. The research was pretty good, the cutting of the quill and the actual writing of the artist contract was difficult. The writing samples of the time period are a wide range from fancy handwriting to calligraphy. Calligraphy is not a strength for me and I struggled. I also didn’t know anything about the handling of vellum and so I ended up fighting my materials. It was quite the messy project.
What was the hardest part of trying something new? What was the most fun?
The hardest part is what I think is the hardest part for everyone. It is the feeling that you want to try something but it is not going to be perfect, not even close and what people might say about your first attempt. I still felt strongly that this was something important in the overall presentation. The most fun was learning about the contracts and what I might have done differently in the future. I also learned that while I continue to get better at calligraphy, it is okay that it isn’t a strength.
List of Laurels’ Challenges for Bloodfeud in the Danelaw
The MoAS is pleased to present ten Laurels’ challenges as a part of Bloodfeud in the Danelaw! Participants may choose to enter as many challenges as they choose, although please keep in mind that physical space at the live event is limited. The goal of these challenges is to begin conversations between artisans and the laurel community to help build community and relationships. This is NOT a competition, and all levels of artisans are welcome to participate!
Each laurel has defined the terms of their challenge, so please read them carefully. If you have questions regarding a challenge, please contact the laurel directly if their contact information has been listed; otherwise, please contact the kingdom minister of A&S at moas@eastkingdom.org.
Please note that some challenges are in person only, some are online only, and some are available both in person and online. Participants attending the live event are welcome to display their art and/or challenges virtually as well. Artisans displaying online should submit their entries following our online display guidelines to our display deputy, Richard Heyworth, via email at moas.display@eastkingdom.org no later than September 15 (early submissions are always welcome!).
For in person challenges, participants will meet with the laurel issuing the challenge live at the event. For online challenges, participants will arrange a time to meet with the laurel issuing the challenge virtually after the online display goes live, which will likely be during the last week of September.
The A&S display and laurels’ challenge at the live event will take place on Saturday, September 30, from 11-3 pm in the feast hall.
Important dates:
Registration deadline for online displays/challenges: September 10 at 11:59 pm
Online submissions due: September 17 at 11:59 pm
Registration deadline for live displays/challenges: September 15 at 11:59 pm
To register for a laurels’ challenge or an A&S display, please visit: https://forms.gle/Q6UCWAftCKgBnjXo7
As always, if you have any questions or concerns regarding these challenges, please contact the kingdom minister of A&S at moas@eastkingdom.org.
List of Challenges
Online only:
HERstory, Lissa Underhill
Research and present information about women or gender minorities in the time period and geographical area related to this event’s theme. Research can be presented in any medium desired, from power-point, to written paper, from TikTok video to interpretive dance. The focus is on teaching me and others who are viewing your work something new and interesting about the past. Since Lissa is a librarian, research help is available! Just ask. Lissa loves research
Make it with Fire! Lissa Underhill
This challenge is asking artisans to recreate a historic item or make a historically plausible item using fire. The item should be connected to the theme of the event in some way. The fire/heat source can be modern, though period methods are always encouraged. This challenge covers many different possible arts, such as (but not limited to) glass bead making, pottery, metalwork, and cooking/brewing. Documentation is great. Lissa loves documentation and Lissa would love to help you with your documentation and/or research. Lissa loves research too. BUT there are no documentation “requirements” for this challenge other than some evidence (a photo or description from a source) showing that this item, or something similar to it, existed historically.
Naalbinding Challenge, Abu-Darzin Ibrahim al-Rashid
Nalbinding had many uses in the Viking age. From practical means to keep hands and feet warm, to functional farm tools, to purely decorative applications. Show me something that you’ve nalbound.
Contact Abu-Darzin at 91124@members.eastkingdom.org with questions.
Following Threads, Tiffan Fairamay
Please teach us something about Viking age textile production. Make a tool, weave or spin, work with period dyestuffs, research the social significance of these crafts, sheep breeds, or animal husbandry… explore or practice any facet of early Norse fiber arts and share the fruits of your studies. Please note, this challenge is now online only.
In person only
A Viking-Age Brew, Marieke van de Dal
The objective is to brew a tasty early-period mead or beer, in as authentic a manner as you can, with plausible early-period ingredients. It should be young – preferably less than 6 weeks old.
That’s all you need to do to enter this challenge, but here are some suggestions to guide you to a higher level. For your yeast, try harvesting wild yeast or using foam/sediment from a previous batch. For process, see if you can avoid using glass, plastic or stainless steel in the making and storing of the beverage. For presentation, think about how the beverage would be served in a Viking longhouse.
Written documentation is welcome but not required. Be prepared to talk about the reasoning behind your recipe and process, and whether you would do anything differently next time.
A Viking Trim, Marieke van de Dal
The objective is to produce at least 12 inches of a woven band in a style that’s suitable to trim a Viking-Age garment.
That’s all that’s required, but if you want to up your game, consider these suggestions. Weave with wool, silk, or linen for greater authenticity. Try a new weaving set-up: if you usually use an inkle loom, for example, try a backstrap or warp-weighted set-up. Explore a technique that’s new to you: brocading, twill, double-faced, or a more complex turning pattern.
Written documentation is welcome but not required. Be prepared to discuss the reasoning behind your choices, and any difficulties you faced or overcame.
Viking Tableware Challenge, Ysemay Sterlyng
Create a piece of tableware (pottery, wood, horn, metal, etc.) that might have been used between 800 and 1050. Please be prepared to present and discuss the historic evidence for your piece.
Online and in person
From Raw to Done: A Makers Journey into the Unexpected, Roibeard mac Neill mhic Ghille Eoin
Our Art is our lifeblood and imbuing ourselves with it is a great part of who we are. Oftentimes we find ourselves doing what we love to such an extent that we begin to plateau in our growth…which can then snowball into our art no longer fulfilling us and our needs.
As a firm believer in expansion of personal artistic growth, doing something that is WAY outside of your comfort zone can reawaken the great love of your artistic lives.
My Challenge, for those who desire to undertake it, is to leave your artistic comfort zone and do something totally different…however there is a catch! I challenge you to do something from barest beginnings, raw material, etc, and take it to completion. Pick a project, enter the rabbit hole, and dive deep! For instance, if you are a scribal artist you can enter metalworking and make something from scratch…from raw material, to ingot, to completion. The process of learning is more important so think of it as a journey or rediscovery and, above all, have fun!
Questions? Contact me, Roibeard mac Neill, at 77881@members.eastkingdom.org
Ancient Music, Aífe ingen Chonchobhair in Derthaige
What might Norse or other pre-900CE music have sounded like? Perform a piece based on your research & then tell me about the choices you made. While ancient instruments are strongly encouraged, use what you can to show off your work.
Bring me (fictional) heads! Aífe ingen Chonchobhair in Derthaige
Tell me an Early Northern European story of battle or revenge in all of its bloodiness (or write one in that style) Tear Grendel’s arm off. Pull out the guts. Cut off the heads. If you compose a new tale, I’d love to hear about what inspired you.
Guidelines for Online Display Entries
Please observe the following guidelines when submitting your work for on online display. Online display submissions should be directed to our online display deputy, Richard Heyworth, at moas.display@eastkingdom.org.
You will need to submit:
Display Information – Details of your entry to be shared on your entrant page (can be short or long). Must be in a text format for copy/paste and not pdf.
If you would like to share links for visitors to visit please include those as well (your blog/personal website/additional photos/additional documentation/etc.).
Optional – Photos – 1-3 images to add to your entrant page – these must be sent as image files and not in a google doc/pdf so that we can upload them to the website. Additionally, all photos must be ones you own the permissions for/show proof they are allowed to be used from the owner.
Optional, Video – for your online display page consider recording a short (2-5 minute) video of you describing your item – this is equivalent to what you might tell a person visiting your entry. Our office can assist with options for recording if needed and file hosting.
Optional, EK Wiki – So that people can identify your face/name, if you have an EK Wiki please include a link to that.
We CANNOT embed pdfs, so please only include a link to one as a google doc in addition to your text. If you want us to host a file for you, please include it in the submission email along with your permission
For some similar examples of entrant pages check out the 2021 Online A&S Competition & Display at https://moas.eastkingdom.org/crowns-arts-sciences-competition-and-display-2021/
If you have any questions about this process please contact the kingdom minister of A&S at moas@eastkingdom.org.
Thank you so much for sharing your art with our Kingdom!