A distressed denim bandolier covered in Wu Tang stickers.
A distressed denim bandolier covered in Wu Tang stickers.
an ol' dirty bandolier
You'll be much more likely to get it in a SHOW where you can explain it more and keeping the short simpler will allow you to mesh it together with your other items more.
You slap Walkar's cheek, hard.He continues, "I've decided that I'm not going to let you serve community service, so don't get your hopes up. To this aim, you may either pay the fine of 50000000 silvers plus any other outstanding debts you may owe, or serve a total of 120 minutes of incarceration. You may ANSWER me either FINE or INCARCERATION as your choice. But I digress. Choose quickly, now, lest I hold you in contempt of court for wasting my time."
So I've come up with this so far:
A war-torn copper-worked harness.
SHOW: Blade-slashed nicks and scars to the worn leather body of the harness are a testament to the battles it has endured. Corroded copper wire holds the outer pleating and the inseam's binding together, while brighter pieces of metal reveal where repairs have been made over the years. Thick leather straps with matching copper buckles of all shapes and sizes thoroughly secure the harness to its wearer.
So maybe I can use some help there still..?
Also:
>analyze bandolier
When altering, keep in mind that the bandolier's messaging references large and small containers, and a row of weapon slots and straps. These can all be altered by a skilled merchant. The containers should remain plural. Currently, they are set to slots (wands and small weapons), straps (belted weapons), a series of straps (back weapons), large sacks (bundled weapons), narrow tubes (paper and scrolls), small pouches (trinkets), and containers (anything else).
I don't have the creative spark to alter the extra tidbits (and, then somehow, perhaps, work them into the show, or what have you?
Still kinda confused. Appreciate any and all help!
Originally Posted by AnticorOriginally Posted by Stanley Burrell
battle worn is nice too
standing between the living and the dead
1. I'd recommend against the double hyphen in the look description, as well as a double compound words. You can go general in the look and specific in the show: e.g. "metalworked harness", and then you talk about the copper in the show. If you really want to use copper-worked, use it as a noun adjunct, as in "copperwork" instead of an adjective. This is not common usage, so here is a link if you need to support: (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/copperwork).
2. "War", in modern usage, describes a geo-socio-political condition, and tends to refer to these things (i.e. places, populations, nations). "War-anything" is a juvenile and clumsy descriptor when used as adjectives or adjective constructs for items, especially war cloaks, war boots, etc. As the posted above intimated, battle is more correct.
You weren't too far off. My recommendation: "A battle-marred copperwork harness."