The sims 2 native american clothing




















Sims 2 Default Database — Default replacements for the hideous Maxis stuff. I used this site to replace most of the awful base game clothing. The forum is updated weekly with all the newly released content scoured from around the web.

Both realistic and Maxis match styles are represented. This site has tons of beautiful objects, lots of clutter, retail and build mode sets, and sets for every room.

Highly recommended! Holy Simoly — Pages upon pages of build sets and furniture. Really great stuff here from this classic site. A few clothing items too. Doors, windows, and walls — oh my! Plus, makeup defaults these are the ones I use in my game. Retail Sims — Amazing sets for retail shops of all kinds including grocery store, liquor store, cigar shop, ice cream shop, purse shop, Pagan shop, fabric shop, and many more.

Sims2Play Archive — One of my favorite sites for awesome furniture sets and objects. Clothing Antkas Defaults — Beautifully done default replacement clothing. Most of my defaults come from here or Lottie Sims. No updates since , but a large catalog to search through.

DeeDee-Sims — Gorgeous Maxis match clothing, objects, conversions, and recolors. I adore her clothing though. Check it out. Grunge Finds — A Tumblr filled with grungy, gothic, alternative, apocalyptic or even Halloween things for your sims 2 game. Still regularly updates. Lottie Sims — Very well-done default replacement clothing.

Many of my defaults come from here. Maxis Match Repository — Its purpose is to take all Maxis based custom content for The Sims 2, cut the files down to minimal size, and make them blend seamlessly with your game files. Lots of great clothing for all ages and genders. Lots of stuff for male Sims, which we always need more of.

No recent updates, but plenty there to download. Not as much content as some of the other sites, but still worth checking out. Simcat81 — Beautiful default replacements for Maxis clothing. What the Skell — Still regularly updates with cute clothes and other objects.

See also the Maxis Match Repository above. YanderePlumSims — A Tumblr featuring lots of cute clothes plus some very nice hairs, lots, and objects. Her default hairs match the ones from Mikexx2 and the Jellybeanery.

Other downloads available here too including colorful wall decor, makeup, and conversions. Beautiful MM hairs that all match each other plus eyebrows. I have dozens of these mods in my game. Very well organized, too. Hexagonal Bipyramid — Creator of the Sims 2 Traits Project review coming to my channel soon and many other awesome mods. Lot of fixes and things that just make the game better to play. She also has some skins and other things available.

I find her LiveJournal to be better organized. Simlogical — Fantastic and creative mods for your game including a prison and school system, auto drapes, teleportation mods, money, aging, fixes, and much more. Highly recommended. Neighborhood Deco Criquette Was Here — The best Tumblr around for unique Neighborhood Deco including things like trees, fences, hedges, boats and piers, embankments, walkways, buildings, and more! The Great Cheesecake Persona — Get skylines, place-able cliffs, and fields, barns, and more to make your neighborhoods look amazing.

Great rural-themed stuff. Native Americans made different pieces of attire from deerskin: shirts, dresses, leggings, cloaks, moccasins, belts, bags, breechcloths etc. Before a hide turned into clothing it had to undergo several important processes: removing from the animal, de-hairing, scraping, smoking, softening, stretching, dyeing, and decorating. When the leather was soft enough to make a garment, it was cut to the needed shape and sewn with sinew.

Buckskin clothing was among favorite costumes of Native American Indians. And after colonizers came, such clothes didn't loose its popularity. It was used by people in America for years. A fur parka is a very convenient piece of clothing for cold weather. It is a knee-long coat with hood made from animal skin and fur. Usually such parkas are sewn with fur inside and fur fringe or ruff attached to the hem, cuffs and hood. To make a parka Native American Indians used fur of Arctic wolf or Arctic fox, wolverine, coyote, husky dog; for the trim white fur of the caribou's belly was used.

Fur parkas were used by such tribes as Yupik, Inuit and other tribes who lived in regions with severe weather conditions. In Alaska people often used 1 or 2 inner parkas to survive in winter. Women's parkas were large and with elongated hoods, they were designed to let a woman carry her baby or infant next to her body.

Inuit people believed that parkas provided spiritual protection from predators or other danger. That's why Inuit parkas were decorated with symbols of wild animals for protection. It is a rectangular piece of cloth or skin worn around the hips. Breechclout was the most widespread part of Native American traditional costume. The usual size of it was about 50 inches long and inches wide. It could be made from bark fiber, buckskin, skins of deer, beaver, raccoon, rabbit, buffalo etc.

A breechcloth was fixed on the waist or hips with a help of a belt or throng. Both men and women used breechcloths. Men wore only this piece in summer, and added leggings during colder seasons. Sometimes a breechclout was worn with a decorated apron on top. Women rarely used a breechcloth. Mostly young girls did. Some women sometimes wore it beneath a dress.

It is a traditional headdress of Native American Indians. War bonnet was used by the war leaders, chiefs and great warriors. This headgear was a reflection of the warrior's bravery and courage or chief's wisdom. Every feather was given to the owner of a war bonnet for a certain brave deed in a battle or for his tribe. The number of feathers showed the courage and respect to the leader. War bonnet of Native Americans. Every tribe had its own traditions of making and wearing a war bonnet.

Different shapes, decorations, design, and style. There are many kinds of war bonnets including long trailing feathered war bonnet, buffalo horn headdresses, straight-up feathered war bonnets, the crown and plume war bonnets, halo war bonnets. Native American warriors wore roach headdresses with war paint for battles. It was made to intimidate enemy. Roach headdress was worn the following way. The warrior shaved his hair leaving a "scalp lock"; it was a long lock of hair at the back side of the head.

The roach was attached to this hair. It looked like a crest of hair, something like a modern mohawk. A roach-spreader was used to hold the hair. The roach headdress was fixed by a special pin or tied by laces to the head and neck. The roach headdress was usually made from moose hair, porcupine guard hair, turkey beard hair and white deer-tail hair.

And it was embellished with feathers and other decorative elements. Mukluks Kamiks or Eskimo boots. About Us. Contact Us. Sign In My Account. Gift Card! Oversized -Spirit Jersey. Joggers - Tie Dye black. Sacred Plants - Heather Natural Tee. Originals Lace Up Hoodie. Hoodie - Gunstock - Pigment Dyed Hoodie. Originals Native America - Rocker Tee. Abolish Vandal - Unisex Black Tee. Ewok - Steven Paul Judd - Limited. May the 4th Be With You Always - SPJ Limited.

Sweatshirt - Originals Thunderbird. Youth Float Like Frybread



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000