Just a bunch of little doodles I've made with 5 minutes here, 30 minutes there!
top to bottom, left to right
1) A nice little wigwam hut. A simple dome frame with lengths of tree bark and/or hides fixed within it. These sorts of structures get their name from the Northeast of the US, but really they appear not just all over the Americas, but all over the world. They are simple to set up, easy to take down if desired but can also last a pretty long time without too much maintenance. They can also be made of a lot of materials.
2) Advanced sit. Experimenting with giving drekir more of an ability to bend inwards, allowing them to sit in different ways, climb ledges and ladders more easily (still not the easiest) etc. Looks kinda weird and I am not sure how that part of the boot could take weight
But regardless its just a concept
3) Gun, I do draw a lot of those.
But simple firearms do see invention and/or adoption in the Americas and Logáu and are a well enough known weapon, though not quite dominant nor necessarily something everyone is gonna recognize. But a technology that has a presence in many regions
This one is simple, a rod with a piece of fire flint at the end is simply pushed along a guided rail (which it is fixed to by simple loops) Into a bowl like flashpan
4) Tubers, doodled after that ramble about agriculture. as I said there I figure a variety of starchy roots and tubers being a fine and common carb heavy pair to the meat that drekir need to get by day to day
Of course some can be odd, potatoes still canonically wander around mindlessly, leaving tubers in their wake to grow. Great for gardening!.. just make sure to wall off the garden
5) Wool, been looking at how sheep wool grows and fiddling with it for drekir, The sheer variety of wools you can get from sheep is honestly kinda nuts! Not really canon but fiddling again
top to bottom, left to right
1) A nice little wigwam hut. A simple dome frame with lengths of tree bark and/or hides fixed within it. These sorts of structures get their name from the Northeast of the US, but really they appear not just all over the Americas, but all over the world. They are simple to set up, easy to take down if desired but can also last a pretty long time without too much maintenance. They can also be made of a lot of materials.
2) Advanced sit. Experimenting with giving drekir more of an ability to bend inwards, allowing them to sit in different ways, climb ledges and ladders more easily (still not the easiest) etc. Looks kinda weird and I am not sure how that part of the boot could take weight
But regardless its just a concept
3) Gun, I do draw a lot of those.
But simple firearms do see invention and/or adoption in the Americas and Logáu and are a well enough known weapon, though not quite dominant nor necessarily something everyone is gonna recognize. But a technology that has a presence in many regions
This one is simple, a rod with a piece of fire flint at the end is simply pushed along a guided rail (which it is fixed to by simple loops) Into a bowl like flashpan
4) Tubers, doodled after that ramble about agriculture. as I said there I figure a variety of starchy roots and tubers being a fine and common carb heavy pair to the meat that drekir need to get by day to day
Of course some can be odd, potatoes still canonically wander around mindlessly, leaving tubers in their wake to grow. Great for gardening!.. just make sure to wall off the garden
5) Wool, been looking at how sheep wool grows and fiddling with it for drekir, The sheer variety of wools you can get from sheep is honestly kinda nuts! Not really canon but fiddling again
Category Artwork (Digital) / Comics
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1252 x 2000px
File Size 426.1 kB
They are very effective homes! They get their name from the Northeast of the US, it an Algonquin word.
But there are Wigwams that appear just about all over the world! They're really good structures! Practical, very much workable with different materials, sturdy. They're great!
But there are Wigwams that appear just about all over the world! They're really good structures! Practical, very much workable with different materials, sturdy. They're great!
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