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Dev Diary #160 - Vision and Art

Hello there!

I’m Pierre “El Tyranos” Azuelos, the creator of the Community Flavor Pack mod. The past couple of months have been busy again and I am once again delighted to collaborate with Paradox Interactive on a second Content Creator Pack named “Western Slavic Attire”.

This second project is a little more special as it does not come alone, for the 8th official language of Crusader Kings III will be released at the same time. The game will be entirely translated into Polish and for free of course!

Introducing the Content Creator Pack

Before showing you some garments, explaining the artistic direction and getting into more technical details, I wish to (re-)introduce you to the vision of this project.

The philosophy remains the same as “North African Attire” and this Content Creator Pack has been designed to be of similar size: you get an entire set of clothes, headwear, armors and trousers for Western Slavic characters. These assets are exclusive new content and they will be officially supported by Paradox Interactive in the future.

Artistic Direction

At the interface between Western and Eastern influences, contemporary sources tend to show a Westernized or Byzantine ceremonial fashion in the highest ranks of the medieval polish societies.

On the opposite, archaeology brings out that the lowest ranks wear similar clothes as the other regional Slavic groups (Sloveins, Ruthenians, Kievans, etc.), inherited from Great Moravia and the Viking age.

Considering the many Western options already in CK3 and even if historical sources show no evidence that Polish high nobility ever dressed as lowborn western Slavs, this Content Creator Pack tries to prioritize Slavic garments as if a Slavic lower nobility fashion outbreaked in courtly dressing.

Character Art

The tunic with apron is THE woman outfit of Eastern Europe and you will get two of them (for a total of 6 variants). “Architectonics of pra-Slavic costume had double or probably tipple layered structure which was kept in the Middle Ages as well” (NSEN, 2020). The main difference between Rus and Western Slavs is the jewelry, in particular the temple rings since they all wear coral necklaces. In contrast to fabrics those are very well documented in archeology. All pieces of jewelry are 1:1 reproductions of actual Polish or Czech artifacts.

1.png

[Mannequins from Archeology museum of Biskupinie and Museum of the Origins of the Polish State, Gniezno, Poland]

2.png

[Left: Duchess Agnes of Głogów-Żagań, Kodeks lubiński, 1353 ; Right: Reenactment by Fibularius]

The svita was the wool outer clothing in the 10th through 13th centuries. It’s an unisex garment. It was made of heavy horizontal strips of a contrasting color fabric, braid or galoons (Kireyeva & Stamerov). The hat is very represented in 14th century Polish sources.

3.png

[Right: Henry the Bearded, Duke of Silesia and his son Henry II Pobożny, duke of Silesia and Greater Poland, Kodeks lubiński, 1353]

There’s no strong evident sources for such a garment, but it allows complex clothing for higher classes without falling back to Byzantine or Western options that are already in the game. The hat is likely Czech, also poorly represented.

4.png

[Left: Špitálky, Vestibule of the church – detail of a silver disc portraying a horseman holding a short baton, the so-called “Falconer” from grave 16, 2nd half of the 9th century ; Right: Around 1385 - detail of a fresco in the Church of St. James the Greater, Slavětín nad Ohří, photo by Martin Hřibc ]

For royalty and imperial tiers, you’ll find several famous crows, from left to right :
  • The crown of Bolesław I the Brave after representations of its second version (made for Ladislaus the Short in 1320) before it was melted in 1794 ;
  • The crown of Casimir the Great as sculpted on his contemporary effigy (made just after his death in 1370) ;
  • The crown of Emnilda słowiańska, wife of Bolesław I the Brave, after a statue of her at the cathedral of Naumburg (1250) ;
  • The travel (or funerary) crown of Casimir the Great, mounted on his display bascinet and, found in his tomb in Krakow.

5.png


Kings and Emperors also get a special version of the svita with a golden belt, pearls and gems fastener as well as a reproduction of Szczerbiec. Szczerbiec is also available as a court artifact. For other characters such as knights and marshals, they will wear a Type Z “Starigard” sword.

6.png


Speaking of swords, are you planning to go to war early in the game? Then grab your gambeson, scale armor and “Giecz” helmet. Based largely upon a little-known but important carved bone or ivory chess piece found in Cracow, this foot soldier illustrates the mixture of Western and Eastern traditions which continued to characterize parts of Poland, especially its eastern provinces. The cuirass is also based upon the chess piece, the details of its construction being taken from an inverted lamellar system seen in neighbouring Russia. (Osprey M.A.A. 445)

7.png


Did you expand peacefully for a century? It’s never too late. As I know you all liked the crazy Aragon golden Dragon Crest from Community Flavor Pack, I could not resist to fit in this adaptation of Pranckh’s Topfhelm displayed in Vienna. The crest is inspired from the Battle of Legnica (1241) representation in Kodeks lubiński. Use it anywhere as long as you crush your enemies and see them driven before you. It will show up for Western Slavic high nobles during Era 3. Regular characters will enjoy the basic helm.

image-08.jpg


Same setup for the bascinet (Era 4, crown for royalty and regular version for others). Side note: enhanced experience for Tours and Tournament owners who will be able to reenact Casimir the Great in his full plate armor glory. Chodźmy!

Conclusion

image-09.jpg


It has been a blast to work on these two Content Creator Packs together with Paradox Interactive. I know the CK3 team has been very happy with this experience and that they have expanded the amount of Content Creators they are working with. I look forward to seeing the results of these new collaborations!

It is now time for me to conclude this Dev Diary and also this chapter of my life. You, the community, are the fuel that made me able to reach this point and I will forever be grateful for your enthusiasm.

I will now focus on other projects of Paradox Interactive, including for CK3. So… until next time!
 
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Congrats Pierre!

Thank you! I hope you'll enjoy this content.


Some FAQs I think are worth sharing here too :

Trick-Promotion-6336
I think we need a bit more variance. What I mean is maybe the west slavs could still sometimes use generic western clothing at the same time. Like we got amazing byzantine clothing but now the characters are never wearing the old byzantine clothing, there's two sets with one not being used.
I confirm that - unlike North African attire - West Slavic garments will be mixed with other clothing cultures (hre/western for the most part).
Patterns are also made to help with cultural blending, some are western, some are Byzantine, some are west slavic.

Question by @cybrxkhan
I'll repeat the question I asked last time: Do you know if the clothing will differ by faith, era, region, or any other criteria?
Yes, armors are era locked. Long story short the armor will dispear at era3, the nasal too, then the western armor takes place and if you own Tours and Tournament you'll be able to wear the bascinet over plate armor during era4. Otherwise it will remain over vanilla COA armor at era4.
Appart from helmets and armor there's no era limitation.
 
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This Content Creator Pack has a very similar weight as North African Attire in terms of workload.
Berber cloaks went into Szczerbiec and the male Royalty clothing, which gives this Content Creator Pack one additionnal clothing option.



Crown of St Wenceslaus is part of the game since its initial release under the name "Imperial Crown". It was indeed the default vanilla imperial crown for western cultures, before tons of new options made it so unlikely to show up.

View attachment 1222218
All this time and I never realized that!
 
Hello there!

I’m Pierre “El Tyranos” Azuelos, the creator of the Community Flavor Pack mod. The past couple of months have been busy again and I am once again delighted to collaborate with Paradox Interactive on a second Content Creator Pack named “Western Slavic Attire”.

This second project is a little more special as it does not come alone, for the 8th official language of Crusader Kings III will be released at the same time. The game will be entirely translated into Polish and for free of course!

Introducing the Content Creator Pack

Before showing you some garments, explaining the artistic direction and getting into more technical details, I wish to (re-)introduce you to the vision of this project.

The philosophy remains the same as “North African Attire” and this Content Creator Pack has been designed to be of similar size: you get an entire set of clothes, headwear, armors and trousers for Western Slavic characters. These assets are exclusive new content and they will be officially supported by Paradox Interactive in the future.

Artistic Direction

At the interface between Western and Eastern influences, contemporary sources tend to show a Westernized or Byzantine ceremonial fashion in the highest ranks of the medieval polish societies.

On the opposite, archaeology brings out that the lowest ranks wear similar clothes as the other regional Slavic groups (Sloveins, Ruthenians, Kievans, etc.), inherited from Great Moravia and the Viking age.

Considering the many Western options already in CK3 and even if historical sources show no evidence that Polish high nobility ever dressed as lowborn western Slavs, this Content Creator Pack tries to prioritize Slavic garments as if a Slavic lower nobility fashion outbreaked in courtly dressing.

Character Art

The tunic with apron is THE woman outfit of Eastern Europe and you will get two of them (for a total of 6 variants). “Architectonics of pra-Slavic costume had double or probably tipple layered structure which was kept in the Middle Ages as well” (NSEN, 2020). The main difference between Rus and Western Slavs is the jewelry, in particular the temple rings since they all wear coral necklaces. In contrast to fabrics those are very well documented in archeology. All pieces of jewelry are 1:1 reproductions of actual Polish or Czech artifacts.

View attachment 1221204
[Mannequins from Archeology museum of Biskupinie and Museum of the Origins of the Polish State, Gniezno, Poland]

View attachment 1221205
[Left: Duchess Agnes of Głogów-Żagań, Kodeks lubiński, 1353 ; Right: Reenactment by Fibularius]

The svita was the wool outer clothing in the 10th through 13th centuries. It’s an unisex garment. It was made of heavy horizontal strips of a contrasting color fabric, braid or galoons (Kireyeva & Stamerov). The hat is very represented in 14th century Polish sources.

View attachment 1221206
[Right: Henry the Bearded, Duke of Silesia and his son Henry II Pobożny, duke of Silesia and Greater Poland, Kodeks lubiński, 1353]

There’s no strong evident sources for such a garment, but it allows complex clothing for higher classes without falling back to Byzantine or Western options that are already in the game. The hat is likely Czech, also poorly represented.

View attachment 1221207
[Left: Špitálky, Vestibule of the church – detail of a silver disc portraying a horseman holding a short baton, the so-called “Falconer” from grave 16, 2nd half of the 9th century ; Right: Around 1385 - detail of a fresco in the Church of St. James the Greater, Slavětín nad Ohří, photo by Martin Hřibc ]

For royalty and imperial tiers, you’ll find several famous crows, from left to right :
  • The crown of Bolesław I the Brave after representations of its second version (made for Ladislaus the Short in 1320) before it was melted in 1794 ;
  • The crown of Casimir the Great as sculpted on his contemporary effigy (made just after his death in 1370) ;
  • The crown of Emnilda słowiańska, wife of Bolesław I the Brave, after a statue of her at the cathedral of Naumburg (1250) ;
  • The travel (or funerary) crown of Casimir the Great, mounted on his display bascinet and, found in his tomb in Krakow.

View attachment 1221208

Kings and Emperors also get a special version of the svita with a golden belt, pearls and gems fastener as well as a reproduction of Szczerbiec. Szczerbiec is also available as a court artifact. For other characters such as knights and marshals, they will wear a Type Z “Starigard” sword.

View attachment 1221209

Speaking of swords, are you planning to go to war early in the game? Then grab your gambeson, scale armor and “Giecz” helmet. Based largely upon a little-known but important carved bone or ivory chess piece found in Cracow, this foot soldier illustrates the mixture of Western and Eastern traditions which continued to characterize parts of Poland, especially its eastern provinces. The cuirass is also based upon the chess piece, the details of its construction being taken from an inverted lamellar system seen in neighbouring Russia. (Osprey M.A.A. 445)

View attachment 1221210

Did you expand peacefully for a century? It’s never too late. As I know you all liked the crazy Aragon golden Dragon Crest from Community Flavor Pack, I could not resist to fit in this adaptation of Pranckh’s Topfhelm displayed in Vienna. The crest is inspired from the Battle of Legnica (1241) representation in Kodeks lubiński. Use it anywhere as long as you crush your enemies and see them driven before you. It will show up for Western Slavic high nobles during Era 3. Regular characters will enjoy the basic helm.

View attachment 1221186

Same setup for the bascinet (Era 4, crown for royalty and regular version for others). Side note: enhanced experience for Tours and Tournament owners who will be able to reenact Casimir the Great in his full plate armor glory. Chodźmy!

Conclusion

View attachment 1221216

It has been a blast to work on these two Content Creator Packs together with Paradox Interactive. I know the CK3 team has been very happy with this experience and that they have expanded the amount of Content Creators they are working with. I look forward to seeing the results of these new collaborations!

It is now time for me to conclude this Dev Diary and also this chapter of my life. You, the community, are the fuel that made me able to reach this point and I will forever be grateful for your enthusiasm.

I will now focus on other projects of Paradox Interactive, including for CK3. So… until next time!
With dev diaries like these I feel like the devs are laughing at the plight of the humble mechanics enjoyer
 
Your stuff looks great. Thanks for your hardwork.
 
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With dev diaries like these I feel like the devs are laughing at the plight of the humble mechanics enjoyer
?

Why would Pierre, a 3D artist and the creator of the CFP mod, who present to us his creator pack about Slavic attires, would talk about mechanics?

And this is the end of Season 3, without this CP you would just not have any DD.

Sometimes I really don't understand comments here...
 
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Interesting that for the "Polish" helmet was used Čorna Mohyla or Chernihiv type helmet of Ruthenian druzhyna, with the trident resembling Ruthenian knyaz insignias. They are believed to be brought to Poland after Boleslav's intervention to Kyiv.
 
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