This is what the interior of the home looks like, with "rooms" partitioned off by thick rug-like tapestries. and thick rugs on the sand floor. There are no hard partitions that would be hit by a random tail, and the rugs on the floors can be cleaned or tossed out (to use as fuel for someone else's house), if worn or irrevocably soiled. All of the rooms are open at the ends towards the central oven, but can be blocked off by a rug over a stick acrtoss the longitudinal supports. Another illustration for the gaming 'zine article on the jaggiri.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Fantasy
Species Dinosaur
Size 1280 x 767px
File Size 255.4 kB
Great world-building, Scott! I like the modular nature of the construction. The Jaggiri could rearrange a dome to suit pretty much any purpose in short order.
Are the anchor points in the dome set during construction, or installed after?
Side note: when looking at this and imagining the potential color schemes (do Jaggiri see color like we do?), I hear the musical score to Morrowind in my mind.
Are the anchor points in the dome set during construction, or installed after?
Side note: when looking at this and imagining the potential color schemes (do Jaggiri see color like we do?), I hear the musical score to Morrowind in my mind.
Jaggiri like brighter colors, but unlike us, where Yellow is the center of our spectrum, for then it's shifted over into the green as they can see a bit into the Ultra-Violet.
In the Jaggiri Housing Pt. one you can see that they are building a groove at the top of the straight section of the walls. Higher up, would be made small holes or gaps in the bricks to pass through metal rings, for the ropes to also pass through the eyes of the support staves the fat ens goes into the grooves in the wall, and the eyelet is towards the center. At the top the dome the gap for the metal ring is either covered with a bronze plate and tarred, or a small glazed ceramic cup, sealed to the roof with tar, to keep things dry inside.
In the Jaggiri Housing Pt. one you can see that they are building a groove at the top of the straight section of the walls. Higher up, would be made small holes or gaps in the bricks to pass through metal rings, for the ropes to also pass through the eyes of the support staves the fat ens goes into the grooves in the wall, and the eyelet is towards the center. At the top the dome the gap for the metal ring is either covered with a bronze plate and tarred, or a small glazed ceramic cup, sealed to the roof with tar, to keep things dry inside.
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