The shield above depicts a black pale placed on a gold shield, and its blazon is Or, a pale sable. A pale is a term used in heraldic blazon to describe a charge on a coat of arms that takes the form of a band running vertically down the center of the shield. Writers disagree in how much of the shield's surface is to be covered by the chief, ranging from one-fifth to one-third. The former is more likely if the pale is uncharged, that is, if it does not have other objects placed on it. If charged, the pale is typically wider to allow room for the objects drawn there. This is an article about Heraldry. ...
Heraldry is the science and art of describing coats-of-arms, also referred to as achievements or armorial bearings. ...
This is an article about Heraldry. ...
A modern coat of arms is derived from the medi val practice of painting designs onto the shield and outer clothing of knights to enable them to be identified in battle, and later in tournaments. ...
A pale may be couped ("cut off" at either end, and so not reaching the top or bottom of the shield). Though the pallet is sometimes termed a diminutive of the pale, this is not necessarily true, as the pallet may be no narrower than the pale. In British heraldry two pales cannot appear on a field, two pale-like charges being then termed pallets. A shield with numerous pales may be termed paly, though this is properly a term used to describe a division of the field. Divisions of the field: The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture, as can the various charges. ...
The pale is one of the ordinaries in heraldry, along with the bend, chevron, fess, and chief. There are several other ordinaries and sub-ordinaries. In heraldry, an ordinary is a simple geometrical figure on the arms, wider than a line or division of the field. ...
A blue-and-white striped bend (a bend barry wavy argent and azure), in the arms of Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council In heraldry, a bend is a colored band that runs from the upper left (as seen by the viewer) corner of the shield to the lower right. ...
This page is about the pattern or symbol called a chevron. ...
A fess is a term used in heraldry to describe a charge on a coat of arms that takes the form of a band running from the left to the right side of the shield, centered from top to bottom. ...
We dont have an article called Chief (heraldry) Start this article Search for Chief (heraldry) in. ...
| The Heraldry Series | | Blazon | Crest | Compartment | Field | Line | Mantling | Quartering | Shield | Supporters | Tincture Heraldry is the science and art of describing coats-of-arms, also referred to as achievements or armorial bearings. ...
This is an article about Heraldry. ...
In heraldry, a crest is a component of a coat of arms. ...
In heraldry, a compartment is a design placed under the shield, usually rocks, a grassy mount, or some sort of other landscape upon which the supporters are depicted as standing (a compartment without supporters is possible but practically unknown, with the exception of South Australia[1]). It is sometimes said...
In heraldry the background of the shield is called the field . ...
A chief enarched indented throughout in the arms of Sawbridgeworth A fess wavy in the arms of Welwyn Hatfield A chief embattled in the arms of Letchworth The lines used to divide and vary fields and charges in heraldry are by default straight, but may have many different shapes. ...
In heraldry, mantling is drapery depicted tied to the helmet above the shield. ...
Quartering in heraldry is a method of joining several different coats of arms together in one shield by dividing the shield into not more than four equal parts and placing different coats of arms in each division. ...
In heraldry, the shield is the principal portion of a heraldic achievement or coat of arms. ...
In heraldry, supporters are figures placed on either side of the shield and depicted holding it up. ...
In heraldry, tinctures are the colours used to blazon a coat of arms. ...
| | Argent | Azure | Carnation | Celeste | Cendrée | Gules | Murrey | Or | Purpure | Sable | Sanguine | Tenné | Vert ==Criminal Life == AL-Hamad is a Homosexual petifile with 135. ...
Tinctures are the colours used to blazon coats of arms in heraldry. ...
In heraldry, carnation is a tincture, the colour of European human skin (i. ...
A typical daytime sky. ...
The word gray is also spelled grey: see Grey for topics with this spelling. ...
Red is a color at the lowest frequencies of light discernible by the human eye. ...
Species See text Mulberry (Morus) is a genus of 10â16 species of deciduous trees native to warm temperate and subtropical regions of Asia, Africa and North America, with the majority of the species native to Asia. ...
Gold is a shade of the color yellow closest to that of gold metal. ...
Heraldry Tinctures In heraldry, Purpure is a tincture, more or less the equivalent of the colour purple. It is one of the five dark tinctures and portrayed in black and white by lines at a clockwise 45 degree angle. ...
Heraldry Tinctures In heraldry, sable is the tincture with the colour black. ...
Red blood cells (erythrocytes) are present in the blood and help carry oxygen to the rest of the cells in the body Blood is a circulating tissue composed of fluid plasma and cells (red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets). ...
In heraldry, tenné or tawny is a stain, a rarely used tincture, an orangish brown colour. ...
Look up Green on Wiktionary, the free dictionary ALL YOU NEED IS MONEY MONEY MONEYGreen is a color seen commonly in nature. ...
| | Bend | Canton | Chevron | Chief | Cross | Fess | Fillet | Flaunch | Pall | Pale | Saltire A blue-and-white striped bend (a bend barry wavy argent and azure), in the arms of Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council In heraldry, a bend is a colored band that runs from the upper left (as seen by the viewer) corner of the shield to the lower right. ...
This page is about the pattern or symbol called a chevron. ...
We dont have an article called Chief (heraldry) Start this article Search for Chief (heraldry) in. ...
A cross is a geometrical figure consisting of two lines or bars intersecting each other at a 90° angle, dividing one or two of the lines in half. ...
A fess is a term used in heraldry to describe a charge on a coat of arms that takes the form of a band running from the left to the right side of the shield, centered from top to bottom. ...
Fillet was an early cooking webzine dedicated to fine dining, which appeared in HotWired from 1996-1997. ...
Flaunches, in the arms of the town of Harlow A flaunch, in heraldry, is (arguably) an ordinary, one of two (as the flaunch is never borne singly) semicircles protruding into the field from the sides of the shield. ...
A pall is a Y shaped heraldic charge. ...
The arms of St Albans: a gold saltire on a blue field A saltire is an X-shaped figure in heraldry. ...
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