![]() ![]() Take, for example, the quintessential beginners song, a musical cantrip: Amazing Grace. After all, your waist is close to being oval, but an oval doesn't fit properly over shoulders, breasts, and whatever. Total nonsense to the layman, like me, and yet when you hear it played on the piano, the nuances come to life in a way that just makes sense, just as I imagine the differences in the way two wizards cast their spells would. You can make prim sashes the same way, but they are nowhere near as satisfying as belts. ![]() Classical prim belts served us well in SL for many years, and I still have quite a few in my inventory. The result is not truly a super-looking belt, but it's about the best you can do if you're not skilled at making mesh (which is by far the better choice). Anyway, link a buckle to it and you have a belt. The dress is made in a high quality kona cotton - a more historically correct fabric for the time, aside from. If you make the iunside diameter of the belt smaller than your own waist, so that part of the belt is actually hidden inside your body, there won't be as many odd gaps as you twist and turn. It consists of a dress, belt, and tartan sash. If your starting shape is a hollowed cylinder, you can taper it if necesary so that it matches the flare of your hips. The "classical" way to do it is to start with either a hollowed cylinder or a torus and then stretch it horizontally to make an oval that is roughly your waist's shape.
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