In
heraldry,
diapering is a technique in which those who emblazon, draw, paint, or otherwise depict
achievements of arms decorate large areas of flat colour by drawing
crosshatches or
arabesques. There is no standard, and each artist is allowed individual idiosyncrasies.
Excluded from blazon With very rare exceptions, diapering is not a part of the
blazon, but is mere decoration, or ornamental accessory. Thus a
shield with diapering is considered the same as a shield of the same design but without diapering. For this reason diapering must not be so obtrusive or so heavily drawn that it could be mistaken for a substantive
charge or for a
variation of the field. This is especially the case with diaper of simple cross-hatching which might be mistaken for a field of
lozengy.
Exceptions There are at least three Scots coats whose blazon includes diaper: • Fulton of Lochliboside, ''Az. diapered or semy of fleurs de lys of the last, on a fess arg. two boar's heads erased of the field'' (Public Register vol 1, p 551, 1789); • Fulton of Park of Inchinnan, a
difference of the above, ''Az. diapered or semy of fleurs de lys of the last, on a fess arg. a boar's head erased of the field'' (Public Register vol 1. pp 550–1); ==Examples==