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Plate Armor

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Close-up of metallic armor on a person's leg with a blurred natural backgroundMarauder Greaves
Marauder Greaves Sale priceFrom £129.00
Sold out201409
201410
Scout Gauntlets - Epic Dark Sale price£73.00
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200416
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Renegade Choker - Epic Dark Sale price£38.00
200219
Bevor handmade armor protecting the face and neck, perfect for medieval-themed events and cosplay.
Bevor - Epic Dark Sale price£121.00
Bevor handmade armor displayed on a model, designed for maximum face and neck protection in medieval style.
Bevor - Polished Steel Sale price£108.00
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200424
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Floating Elbow - Epic Dark Sale price£91.00
200537
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Eventide Gorget worn by a character with dark makeup, showcasing its protective design in a dramatic setting.
Eventide Gorget - Epic Dark Sale price£68.00
201015
Dreki Greaves displayed on a warrior's legs, showcasing robust design and steel protection for lower legs.
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20141151
Steel Mittens - Polished Steel Sale price£107.00
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Steel Mittens - Epic Dark Sale price£120.00
Landsknecht Spaulder - 1.6mm - Yoremade worn by a model, showcasing unique layered protection and historical design.
Rondel Hand Protection close-up showing sturdy glove with protective shield for fencers, ensuring hand safety during sparring.
Rondel Hand Protection featuring sturdy leather gloves with a metal guard for improved fencing safety.
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Renegade Complete Armour Set - Masculine - Epic Dark Sale price£688.50 Regular price£765.00
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Renegade Complete Armour Set - Masculine - Matte Polish Sale price£624.60 Regular price£694.00
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Corrazina - Epic Black Sale price£230.00
200504
Corrazina - Red Sale price£230.00
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Corrazina - Green Sale price£230.00
200521
Churburg Armour - Epic Dark Sale price£244.00
200520
201002
Landsknecht Gorget - 1.6mm - Yoremade worn by a historical reenactor showcasing medieval armor and attire.
Landsknecht Cuirass - 1.6mm - Yoremade worn by a soldier in historical armor at a rustic location.
Save 10%343101 01
Complete Landsknecht Armour Set - Polished Steel Sale price£595.80 Regular price£662.00
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Complete Landsknecht Armour Set - Epic Dark Sale price£710.10 Regular price£789.00
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CQ Undead Heavy Deal - Epic Dark Sale price£663.30 Regular price£737.00
Save 10%800701
CQ Black Ice Heavy Deal - Polished Steel & Epic Black Sale price£663.30 Regular price£737.00
200507
Eventide Cuirass
Eventide Cuirass - Epic Dark Sale price£235.00
200532
Char-a'ina - Epic Dark Sale price£120.00
200531
Char-a'ina - Polished Steel Sale price£90.00
Sold outBreast Plate Warrior worn by a man, showcasing a dark, sculpted breastplate armor in a medieval setting.
Man wearing Breast Plate Warrior armor resting against a tree, showcasing the polished steel design and structural strength.
Breast Plate Dark Drake worn by a man, showcasing its sculpted armor design with reptilian scales.
Save 10%231201 01
Undead Neck & Shoulder set - Epic Dark Sale price£204.30 Regular price£227.00
200302
Sold out200303
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Milanese Pauldrons - Epic Dark Sale price£223.00
200323
Dreki Pauldrons - Matte Polish Sale price£159.00
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Floating Knee - Polished Steel Sale price£108.00
20102000
Floating Knee - Epic Dark Sale price£121.00
201016
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Dreki Armguards worn by a warrior in chainmail and armor, showcasing robust steel protection and Nordic design.
Sold out124801 08
200453
Sold out200425
200426
Milanese Couter - Epic Dark Sale price£115.00
200914
Save 10%801412
CQ Undead Arm & Leg Protection Set - Epic Dark Sale price£86.40 Regular price£96.00
Save 10%200750
Orc Armour deal - Rust Brown Sale price£270.90 Regular price£301.00

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Plate Armor

Plate armor is the most recognizable form of protective equipment in the Western military tradition, and one of the most enduring images in history, fantasy, and living history alike. A fully armored knight in late medieval plate is instantly legible across centuries of art, literature, and imagination: the shaped steel chest, the articulated limbs, the visual weight of a body entirely enclosed in metal. That image did not emerge from nowhere. It was the product of two centuries of incremental engineering, as European armorers refined the combination of individual steel components into a complete protective system that remains visually compelling and technically impressive today.

This is where that system lives. Our plate armor range covers the full body in steel, from chest and back to shoulders, arms, hands, hips, and legs, organized into subcategories so you can find the specific piece you need or build toward a complete harness one component at a time.


What Plate Armor Actually Is, and Where It Came From

Plate armor refers specifically to protective equipment made from shaped metal plates, as distinct from mail, which uses interlocking rings, or lamellar and scale constructions, which use smaller overlapping plates laced together. The defining characteristic is the large formed plate: shaped to the body, rigid enough to deflect rather than absorb blows, and fitted closely enough to allow movement despite its rigidity.

The transition from mail to plate armor in Europe began in earnest in the early 14th century, driven by the increasing effectiveness of the crossbow and the need for protection that mail alone could not provide. Plate components appeared first at the most exposed and structurally important points: the knees, the elbows, the chest. Over the following century and a half, armorers gradually extended plate coverage across the entire body until, by the mid 15th century, a fully equipped knight could be armored from head to foot in shaped steel with no mail visible at all.

The result was the full plate harness: one of the most sophisticated pieces of functional engineering produced by the medieval period. A well-fitted harness distributed its weight across the shoulders and hips rather than concentrating it, allowed a surprising range of motion at every joint through careful shaping and articulation, and provided a level of protection against the weapons of the period that mail simply could not match. The image most people carry of the medieval knight in shining armor reflects the harness at its peak development, roughly 1420 to 1520, before firearms made the weight-to-protection calculation no longer viable.


How the Range Is Organized

Plate armor covers a lot of ground, and the subcategories below reflect the way a harness is actually built: by body region, from the pieces that anchor the kit outward to the components that complete it.

The chest is where most builds start. A breastplate or cuirass establishes the visual and structural foundation of a harness, and everything else connects to or coordinates with it. From there, the natural progression moves to the neck and shoulders, then down the arms to the hands, and separately down through the hips and legs to the feet.

Each subcategory covers one part of that progression in depth, with its own range of historical styles, aesthetic variants, and price points. The organization is designed so that whether you are buying a single piece to add to an existing kit or researching a complete harness from scratch, you can navigate directly to the relevant section without wading through the entire range.

For buyers who want a matched set rather than building piece by piece, the Suits of Armor subcategory covers complete multi-component sets designed to work together out of the box.


Steel, Finish, and What to Expect

Every piece in this range is built from mild steel, the same material used in historical reproduction armor: workable, durable, and capable of taking a convincing finish. Two primary finishes appear across the range. Polished Steel gives a bright reflective surface suited to maintained and ceremonial armor impressions. Epic Dark is an antiqued darker finish that reads as older and more weathered. Both are equally durable for LARP and reenactment use and the choice between them is primarily aesthetic.

Leather appears in strapping and attachment hardware across most pieces, securing components to the body and connecting adjacent plates at articulation points. It is worth conditioning strap components periodically to keep them supple, particularly if the armor sees regular outdoor use.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is plate armor practical for LARP? Yes. Steel plate armor is worn regularly at LARP events across Europe and North America. Most LARP systems have no restrictions on metal armor beyond standard safety considerations, and a well-fitted harness is considerably more manageable in active use than its appearance might suggest. Check your specific event rules if you are unsure.

Where should I start if I am building a plate armor kit from scratch? The chest piece is the conventional starting point: it establishes the visual foundation and everything else connects to or coordinates with it. From there, gorget and shoulder armor are typically the next additions, followed by arm and leg protection as the build develops.

How do I maintain steel plate armor? Wipe down after use to remove moisture and prevent rust. Apply a light coat of oil to exposed steel surfaces periodically, particularly if the armor is stored for extended periods or used outdoors in wet conditions. Condition leather strap components with leather balm once or twice a year.