Difference between revisions of "The Azure Tutorial from Envite - Solutions 1"
(Created page with "The solutions to the previous exercises are: <code>or an eagle sable</code> Well, this is the Coat of Arms of the Federal Republic of Germany. Coats of Arms may be simple! <code>purpure an arming sword</code> Yes, both "a" and "an" work likely and mean "one". The program doesn't uses English grammar, but its own. <code>vert a lion or</code> I prefer to write this one as <code>sinople a lion or</code> but that is a personal preference. '''Sinople''' is also a tradition...") |
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Latest revision as of 23:26, 11 February 2023
The solutions to the previous exercises are:
or an eagle sable
Well, this is the Coat of Arms of the Federal Republic of Germany. Coats of Arms may be simple!
purpure an arming sword
Yes, both "a" and "an" work likely and mean "one". The program doesn't uses English grammar, but its own.
vert a lion or
I prefer to write this one as
sinople a lion or
but that is a personal preference. Sinople is also a traditional heraldic name for green.
gules a bear tenne
celestial azure a compass rose argent
Both tinctures and charges can have multiple words in their names. The DrawShield system works correctly with that.
sable an eagle gules
Do you remember the film "The Black Shield of Falworth"?
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