Fibers - Plant fibres include seed hairs like cotton; stem (or bast) fibres like flax and hemp as well as leaf fibres like sisal and husk fibres, such as coconut.
Animal Hides: Animal hides including the wool and skin of animals.
+0) Common Animal Hide
+1) Dire Centipede Hide
+2) Dire Snake Hide
+3) Dire Wolf Hide
+4) Dire Scorpion Hide
+5) Dire Spider Hide
+6) Dire Boar Hide
+7) Dire Crocodile Hide
+8) Dire Tiger Hide
+9) Dire Lion Hide
+10) Dire Shark Hide
Woven Fibres: Woven fibres include the fibres of hearty fibre-rich plants and are usually thicker and less flexible than cloth armor.
+0) Sisal (Leaves)
+1) Century Weave (Roots)
+2)
Lupine (Roots)
+3) Darkrose Vines (Vine)
+4) Purple Rockweed
+5) Irongrass (Stalks)
+6) Diamondwillow (Shoots)
+7) Iron Palm Vines (Vine)
+8) Silver Rockweed
+9) Devilclaw (Roots)
+10) Bloodrose (Leaves)
+11) Amethyst Tree (Roots)
+12) Steelvine
+13) Dragonscale (Roots)
+14) Crystal Spider Web (Mystical)
+15) Druids Steel (Mystical)
+16) Zieba Tree (Roots)
+17) Anansi Spider Web
+18) Amber Tree (Roots)
+19) Wyrmskin Scale
+20) Gray Lotus (Roots)
Cloth Fibres: Cloth Fibres are created from the wool and hair of animals or the secretions such as silk.
+0) White Abaca (Leaf Sheaths)
+1) Coir
+2) Pure Coir
+3) Cotton
+4) Pure Cotton
+5) Jute | Flax
+6) Black Ramie
+7) Silver Abaca | White Angora
+8) Dragonvine
+9) Mohair | Spun Gold
+10) Dragonwhisker | Vicuna
Used:
Edible:
Internal:
External:
Aromatherapy:
Essential Oil:
Warnings:
Cloth Fibres - Soft materials used for clothing and internal armor.
+0 White Abaca - Once a favored source of common rope, abaca shows promise as a replacement for glass and gem fragments in magical recipes. Abaca fibre is highly valued for its exceptional strength, flexibility, buoyancy, and resistance the elements. These qualities make the fibre exceptionally suitable for ships’ ropes, hawsers, fishing nets, textiles, and magical paper.
+0 Sisal - Too coarse for clothing, sisal is replacing other fibres in materials used to make basic textiles and under linings for furniture
(+1-2) Coir - A coarse, short fibre extracted from the outer shell of coconuts, coir is found in ropes, mattresses, brushes, geotextiles and internal armor. It can be reinforced to make a stouter armor.
(+3-4) Cotton - Pure cellulose, cotton is the world's most widely used natural fibre and still the undisputed "king" of the global textiles industry. Cotton can be reinforced with Jute strips to make reinforced cotton.
(+5) Jute - The strong threads made from jute fibre are
(+5) Flax Fibres - The strong threads made from flax fibres are used in most common crafting recipes due to their amazing properties common availability and ease of use. One of nature's strongest vegetable fibres, flax was also one of the first to be harvested, spun and woven into textiles
(+6) Black Ramie - Black Ramie fibre is dark, with a silky luster, and is one of the strongest natural fibres, similar to flax in absorbency and density. It can be woven with and reinforced with extra Dragonling's Hair to make it strong enough for armor.
(+7) White Angora - The fluffy material is pure white and appears to be very fine and soft. It comes from the angora rabbit and it is used in high quality internal items and other textiles.
(+7) Silver Abaca - This smooth silver material is very loose and flowing and reflects small silver sparks of light under bright conditions. The Silver Abaca plant is closely related to and resembles the Abaca plant. It's twenty stout fibres are obtained from the plant leaf stalks and can be split and woven into fine cloth. When the plant stalk is full a large flower spike comes out of the top and sparkles with soft silver light. Below it small flowers, which are cream to dark rose in color, occur in dense clusters. Unlike normal Abaca, Silver Albaca fibre is great for armor and other textiles.
(+8) Dragonvine - This material is dark purple and appears to be expertly woven and etched with great skill. It is adorned with small silver colored stones and stitched with black thread around the edges.
Note:
Recent advances in the farming and manipulation of this fibre could open the door to great improvements in this already great fibre. It can be reinforced with Dragonling's Hair to make a strong silky dark purple-colored armor.
(+9) Mohair -
This bright blue material is a very fine and silky and is noted for its softness, brightness and receptiveness to rich dyes.
(+9) Spun Gold -
This bright blue material is a very fine and silky and is noted for its softness, brightness and receptiveness to rich dyes.
(+10) Dragonwhisker - This cloth is made from the whiskers of a dragonling. This item is in limited supply but it's exceptional characteristics have made wool the world's premier textile fiber as a base for higher level magical textiles.
(+10) Vicuna - The fluffy material is pure white and appears to be very fine and soft. It comes from the angora rabbit and it is used in high quality internal items and other textiles.
Alpaca wool - Alpaca is used to make high-end luxury fabrics, with world production estimated at around 5 000 tonnes a year
Camel hair - The best fibre is found on the Bactrian camels of Mongolia and Inner Mongolia, and baby camel hair is the finest and softest
Cashmere - Cashmere is exceptionally soft to the touch owing to the structure of its fibres and has great insulation properties without being bulky
Mohair - This item is made of tightly woven mohair cloth stitched and tied together with flax string to form soft and sturdy armor. Mohair is a bright white, very fine and silky fibre which is noted for its softness, brightness and receptiveness to rich dyes.
Silk - Developed in ancient times, where its use was reserved for royalty, silk remains the "queen of fabrics"
expensive fibers:
pina
camelhair
quiviut
expensive fabrics:
cowrie cloth
mudcloth
electroluminescent fabrics
carbon fiber fabrics