The final leg protection is present in the form of a pair of cuisses. This cloth armour is made by stuffing a double layer of linen with a variety of substances: horse hair, rope pickings and even straw are known. The stuffing is kept in place by quilting through the structure, and the final result is an excellent, light (if hot) method of spreading the force of a blow over a wider area to reduce damage. Like the chausses, each cuisse is tied to the belt to keep it at the right height.
For a knight on a horse in a normal riding position (with legs more extended and forward pointing than on current saddles: more "Harley Davidson" than "Japanese Rice Rocket") it's likely that the cuisses could be a relatively tight fit over the chausses - this lack of movement in the cuisse allows the vulnerable kneecaps more guaranteed protection in the form of extra armour. This is provided by a pair of poleyns - virtually the first use of plate armour used on the body. Initially, as here, these are little more than beaten domes of steel stitched to the cuisses, but they quickly develop into more complex forms protecting the whole knee joint from side attacks.
This picture also shows the early form of prick-spur worn on the feet. Short rowel-spurs (rotating spiked wheels on the back of spurs) are first introduced in around 1280 in England, but these prick-spurs have developed the relatively new curved support that ensures they run under the ankle bones, a development from the flat support that arrived with the Norman invasion.