- Code: Select all
Held or in Room (Consumed): 2 of a bar of unscented, lye-and-tallow soap.
Is that right? Two entire bars of soap, not partially consumed?
Moderator: Elder Staff
by Inzannadee » Fri Oct 24, 2014 2:14 pm
Held or in Room (Consumed): 2 of a bar of unscented, lye-and-tallow soap.
by Inzannadee » Fri Oct 24, 2014 2:19 pm
> m large-undyed-leather
Dyecraft: dye large-undyed-leather
[...]
Held or in Room (Consumed): a large, $leathercolorcolor square of leather.
[...]
Produced: a medium, $leathercolorcolor square of leather.
by Taurgalas » Fri Oct 24, 2014 3:52 pm
Inzannadee wrote:For the leather dye crafts, can you just verify the soap usage?
- Code: Select all
Held or in Room (Consumed): 2 of a bar of unscented, lye-and-tallow soap.
Is that right? Two entire bars of soap, not partially consumed?
by Taurgalas » Fri Oct 24, 2014 4:55 pm
Inzannadee wrote:Sorry for the spam, but I'm just posting these as I find them.> m large-undyed-leather
Dyecraft: dye large-undyed-leather
[...]
Held or in Room (Consumed): a large, $leathercolorcolor square of leather.
[...]
Produced: a medium, $leathercolorcolor square of leather.
Produces the wrong size square.
by Misclicked » Sat Oct 25, 2014 5:12 am
exa phea
A green-headed, red-faced pheasant face looks deathly pale.
A green-headed, red-faced pheasant has a gushing severe puncture on the
left leg.
It has a simple, carved deep golden hawthorn long-arrow lodged in the left
leg.
A green-headed, red-faced pheasant collapses into the corpse of a
green-headed, red-faced pheasant.
A green-headed, red-faced pheasant collapses to the ground, dead.
exa corp
It is the corpse of a green-headed, red-faced pheasant.
by Taurgalas » Sat Oct 25, 2014 9:38 am
by Onasaki » Tue Oct 28, 2014 12:19 am
by soiacc » Sat Nov 08, 2014 12:19 am
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Finishing a oodcolor0 wooden longsword, and set it aside.
A $woodcolor0 wooden longsword lies here.
by Inzannadee » Wed Nov 12, 2014 4:55 pm
make suede-shoe wrote:Pleased with your work, you draw a pale, boar leather lace through the
holes on the vamp, allowing the future wearer to tighten the shoes on their
feet. You set aside a pair of eathercolor suede shoes.
by Meneldor » Thu Nov 13, 2014 12:30 am
by LadyMizra » Thu Nov 13, 2014 11:29 pm
by Meneldor » Fri Nov 14, 2014 10:34 pm
LadyMizra wrote:Butcher warg-carcass is broken and crashes the game.
by Mavinero » Mon Nov 17, 2014 11:34 pm
by Mavinero » Fri Nov 21, 2014 7:21 pm
by Meneldor » Fri Nov 21, 2014 8:22 pm
by Onasaki » Sun Nov 23, 2014 8:11 pm
by Meneldor » Mon Nov 24, 2014 12:49 am
by Onasaki » Tue Nov 25, 2014 9:16 pm
by Meneldor » Wed Nov 26, 2014 2:42 pm
Onasaki wrote:Forge Mace-Component seems to be using 11 uses of an ingot, despite the craft still saying 6.
by teepu » Wed Nov 26, 2014 4:11 pm
by Meneldor » Wed Nov 26, 2014 11:24 pm
teepu wrote:make spooled-wire
Yes - sometimes (happened one time with me - in a row for three of them from one ingot) , the pitted bog-iron ingot magically produced a spool of iron wire, instead of a spool of pitted-bog-iron wire.
by teepu » Sat Nov 29, 2014 4:26 pm
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
You step over to a sturdy metal forge, and feed 15 bundle of firewoods into it, beginning to stoke the fire.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
After a short while, a sturdy metal forge is stoked to the necessary heat, and you begin to heat a round ingot of pitted-bog-iron.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Eventually, a round ingot of pitted-bog-iron is heated to the point that you can move it to the annealing area of a broad workbench.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Working carefully with a set of calipers and a pair of pliers, you begin to draw a long length of metal wire from a round ingot of pitted-bog-iron.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Working slowly and carefully, you draw a long length of metal wire from the ingot.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Eventually, you finish drawing the wire out, and begin to wrap it about a small spool.
<****** / ^^^^^^ / ||||||>
Finally, you set aside a spool of bog-iron wire, your work complete.
by mongwen » Sat Nov 29, 2014 5:04 pm
by mongwen » Mon Dec 01, 2014 9:16 am
crafts
You currently have crafts in the following areas:
leatherworking *medium-leather-square* cobbling
tanning dyecraft passtime
cooking general-cooking butchering
orc-cooking armoring mirkwood
general blacksmithing bonecraft
artistry general-cleaning general-outdoors
metal-armoring commissions foraging
foraging-herbalism
crafts medium-leather-square
You know the following medium-leather-square crafts:
cut leathercraft
>
m leathercraft
Medium-leather-square: cut leathercraft
Phase 1: 15 seconds
Phase 2: 20 seconds
Phase 3: 40 seconds
Phase 4: 20 seconds
Phase 5: 20 seconds Familiar Leathercraft skill required.
Phase 6: 10 seconds
OOC Delay Timer: 60 RL Minutes
OOC Failure Timer: 60 RL Minutes
>
by mongwen » Wed Dec 03, 2014 9:08 am
Mavinero wrote:The leather-ankle-sheath craft is a little wonky.
You set out a medium, creamy-white square of leather, laying it out to make sure there's enough leather.
You begin to cut out the desired shapes from the hide with a pair of bog-iron shears, a long, thin strip and a misshapen square of leather.
You pull out a length of twine from 2 spool of thick, waxed, nettle-hemp twines and thread a pitted-bog-iron sewing awl before snipping the danging line with a pair of bog-iron shears.
Folding over the square to create the main part of the sheath, you begin to sew the leather from the bottom along the long side.
You then attach the strap, joined with 8 polished bog-iron buckles, sewing both firmly in place.
Finally, satisfied that the strap will properly attach to the width of an ankle, you set aside a stiff, pale ankle sheath, finished.
There is also a typo within, but I was moreso bringing attention to the changes in color from the starting leather color.
You set out a small, mottled grey square of leather, laying it out to make
sure there's enough leather.
>
>
You begin to cut out the desired shapes from the hide with a pair of
pitted-bog-iron shears, a long, thin strip and a misshapen square of
leather.
>
You pull out a length of twine from a spool of thick, waxed, horsehair
twine and thread a pitted-bog-iron sewing awl before snipping the danging
line with a pair of pitted-bog-iron shears.
>
Folding over the square to create the main part of the sheath, you begin to sew
the leather from the bottom along the long side.
>
>
You then attach the strap, joined with 3 polished pitted-bog-iron buckles,
sewing both firmly in place.
>
>
Finally, satisfied that the strap will properly attach to the width of an
ankle, you set aside a stiff, tan ankle sheath, finished.
You have branched a new subcraft, sew snug-suede-leggings!
>
look ankl
This ankle sheath is tan and constructed of polecat hide that is stiff. It
is little more than a rectangle attached with a strap bearing a holey, impure
bog iron buckle. The length is just large enough to affix around an ankle.
The size of the small sheath is sufficient only for smaller weapons.