Guest Fest, al-Barran
Meet People and Learn Things

Preparing for Kingdom A&S Competitions
(as an entrant and an attendee)

Mistress Monika von Zell, Mistress of the Pelican and of the Laurel
March 1, 2006



Kingdom Arts & Sciences will be held on Saturday April 14, 2007, and Mistress Monika encouraged everyone to go. Reasons include: Mistress Monika wants to demystify A&S competitions by telling us how everything works. She brought samples of judging sheets, documentation, and examples of presentation.

She also brought many beautiful objects to show us: Wooden spoons by Master Jochen; a scroll by Baroness Sarah de Montgomery; and a beautiful red dress and matching cap by _______ .

Kingdom A&S is one type of competition, and the most intense in-kingdom. Inter-Kingdom competitions (such as the one at Estrella) can be even more competitive. In order to be Kingdom A&S Champion, you have to enter at least three items in at least 2 categories. The current Kingdom A&S Champ is Lady Jorunn nic Lochlainn. There are other types of competition, such as Queen’s Prize, which is much more of an exhibition, where everyone usually gets a prize.

Handout: Kingdom A&S Rules and Judging sheets.

Mistress Monika drew our attention to the importance of documentation, which is a huge part of the educational aspect of the society; she observed that when we do documentation, the primary person we are educating is ourselves! She also pointed out that most of us have already done documentation, whether for our name or device or persona or even that piece of garb. What’s required for a competition is just writing it up.

Handouts: One Page Documentation, Step by Step Documentation, Interacting with History, Useful Internet Documentation (for cookery)

A note on “primary” sources: “Primary” is the object (bowl, dress, helmet) itself, but that’s tricky because so many objects are lost, disintegrated, or else firmly contained in museums. Therefore, for SCA purposes, a picture in a museum or a clear reference in a medieval manuscript can serve as primary documentation. Even if you saw the picture or read the text in a book or on the web, BE SURE to tell the judges the name of the museum or the name of the manuscript itself.

Another nice thing to do in your documentation is color copies, if you can afford them.

Mistress Monika showed us a number of examples of good & bad documentation. She also talked a little bit about what NOT to do—the most notable examples were cases where someone had photocopied a page out of a book and circled one of the pictures or highlighted a line of text. This has at least three problems: