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lucky10
Title can't be empty.
Title can't be empty.
Second to last page of Lucky~
We have come so far guys! All thanks to the lovely patrons Zane, Jake, Jayce, Zelda, and Isaac!
Speedpaint located here! https://youtu.be/wzTK5hkotnI
hope you all enjoy! And if you're interested in supporting, or even BEING In this comic then consider pleding your support!
For as low as $15/mo you could get your character featured in the background of the first chapter of this comic!
And for as low as $3-$6/mo you could see comic wips! And the releases up to ONE MONTH earlier than the public!
We have come so far guys! All thanks to the lovely patrons Zane, Jake, Jayce, Zelda, and Isaac!
Speedpaint located here! https://youtu.be/wzTK5hkotnI
hope you all enjoy! And if you're interested in supporting, or even BEING In this comic then consider pleding your support!
For as low as $15/mo you could get your character featured in the background of the first chapter of this comic!
And for as low as $3-$6/mo you could see comic wips! And the releases up to ONE MONTH earlier than the public!
6 years ago
165 Views
0 Likes
Clay 'apartment' type buildings of regular design, shared walls, and roof-only access seem to have been a thing in the more highly organized end of the late neolithic. Perhaps it was the very best you could do without basic metal tools to dress stone.
This society is roughly neolithic-ish in my furry universe, so in essence they're just stuck with clay tablets and rock tools.
Later in the series this historical mumbo jumbo will be indicative of the social classes!
They were thin so they air-dried quickly, sturdy enough to hold a standard meal, and could then be tossed into a sort of collection heap. Since they were never fired, the used ones could then be given a quick rinse, broken up and soaked back into usable clay, becoming another batch of the same thin bowls stamped out using a standardized mold.
They also used clay for a number of other things we would use paper or cardboard for, such as temporary transport boxes or pouches for small items, all of which were made of the same sort of recyclable air-dried clay.