Download and more info under the cut [SFS, free - Patreon, free]
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V1 - Hair, V2 - Hair without cheek framing strands, V3 - Hair without any small strands, V4 Hair without small strands and also without cheek framing strands.
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LOD 0 :
V1 - 59k poly
V2 - 51k poly
V3 - 41k poly
V4 - 33k poly
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Otherwise should be fine. You won't see this issue with V2 and V4, but this does happen with V1.
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Known issues :
Nothing thus far. Let me know if anything comes up. Hair has been tested in game.
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Boring shit :
TOU* :
Provided the usage is NONCOMMERCIAL AND THERE IS NO EARLY ACCESS OR AD REVENUE GAINED FROM YOUR USE OF THE ASSETS
DOU (do! tou)
Edits and recolors are welcome. You may include the mesh.
Conversions to other sim games is fine.
Conversions to games that don't have rewards for creating / uploading cc is fine. You might find it better to just convert straight from the source games rather than using my versions, though.
Reuploading is fine for archival purposes (If my patreon and SFS are gone, and my tumblr has not provided other links)
Use in deco sims or build objects is fine (that'd be really cool!!!)
Make corrections or compatibility updates if Posies is unable to do it, inactive or too busy.
NOU (no! tou)
No using this cc in paid or early access sim dumps.
No using this cc on model sims when advertising your own paid or early access cc.
No uploading this cc, derivatives or this cc or links to this cc to ad-sites [simfinds, curseforge, modco, any individual cc finds blog external to tumblr that receives ad revenue, any other social media account which is monetized. I don't care if people see my cc- you are not an altruist, you are a capitalist. starve.]
No re-uploading this cc to cc packs.
No re-conversions to games that have external or internal rewards systems for creating cc.
Regarding conversions :
Posies converts solely for fun and to bring items into the sims 4 which Posies enjoys and believes can be used for players to greater express themselves.
The meshes Posies has used have already been on the internet for some time. Posies isn't converting the meshes entirely faithfully, but trying to be creative and transformative with how Posies uses the textures and meshes Posies converts.
Non commercial share-alike only, This post is not monetized, you should not monetize or otherwise profit from the use of this mesh, these files, these textures. You should not monetize or otherwise profit from derivatives of this mesh, these files, these textures. Bundling this file into paid sim-dumps, republishing links to this file on sites which receive ad revenue, bundling this file and republishing this for any commercial use is prohibited.
If crediting via wcif please remember these are conversions and so while much was done by Posies, this is also a derivative work and the effort that the original artists put into their work should not be devaluated.
Posies does not support selling conversions from other games into the sims 4 (nor any other game for that matter.).
Hi! A little over a year ago, I messaged the lovely @sychik if she would be open to making a robe volante mesh. She agreed, and the mesh was completed last year in September. Only now have I gotten around to recoloring it. This would NOT be possible without her; she made the mesh. All thanks to her.
A Robe Volante was a gown that was invented and popularized by the French in the early 18th Century (mainly 1720s and 1730s) as a means of comfort to oppose the previous mantuas that Louis XIV enforced on the ladies of his court. These previous gowns had very tight corsets, were extravagant, and were ultimately not comfortable to wear. The Robe Volante had loose corsets and was very flowy and lightweight for the standards of the time. It was also eroticized, as it allowed the men to see the lady's ankles when they walked. It began to fall out of fashion in the early 1740s, as it evolved into the robe à la française.
This Robe Volante for your Rococo sims has 100 swatches! 99 have 18th-century patterns, and 1 is completely black for mourning. It is also only 6k poly!
Display Index organized by 1720
Works for everyday, formal, party, hot weather, and cold weather!
Also converted for toddlers and children; see below.
As always, please let me know if you have any issues
Robe Volante extant garments and in paintings below ; ))
Odette of Brichester, Queen Consort of Windenburg & San Myshuno (1735-1829)
Born into the Brichester princely family, Odette lived a privileged childhood until 1740 when her parents tragically died. Odette was left in the care of her grandmother, the Dowager Princess Serena, who ruled the principality as regent for her brother, Prince Hendrik. The principality suffered devastating blows after entering a war with Tartosa, who invaded the city and held the royal family captive. The atrocities the people of Brichester faced during the city's occupation scarred Odette for life. Several of Odette's family members died during their time in captivity, including two of her older brothers and her favorite sister, Amalia. After seven years of occupation, the city was liberated by Windenburg in 1749. To cement the newfound alliance, Odette was offered by her family as a bride to the Prince of the Isle, the heir to the throne of Windenburg. Odette wasn't married off until 1751, when she turned 16 years old. Despite only meeting her husband, Edmund, on their wedding day, the two fell deeply in love with one another. The couple would go on to have 7 children during their 16-year marriage. Their children included King George I, King Edmund X, Princess Elliana, Queen Consort of Esha (@crownsofesha), Prince Octavius, Duke of Rochester, Prince Frederick, Duke of Burgundy, Princess Elizabeth, and Princess Amelia, Queen Consort of Trenton (@trentonsimblr). Odette and Edmund cultivated a perfect family life, preferring to spend time in the country away from the eyes of the court. The royal couple projected an image of a family life that was relatable to their subjects.
Odette's husband, Edmund, tragically died in 1767 after falling off his horse and hitting his head on a sharp rock. He swiftly died an hour after his fall. Odette set her grief aside and quickly took control of the regency for her young son, George, who was 14 years old. Odette's four years as regent marked an era of economic prosperity, earning her place as one of the most beloved regents in history. After the regency ended, Odette's life was marked by family tragedy and drama. The amoral lives of her sons and their production of several illegitimate offspring throughout the 1770s and 1780s tarnished the royal family's image as a "perfect family." Odette saved her reputation in the 1790s by arranging the marriage of her three younger sons to foreign princesses. Odette's prominent and domineering role in her children's lives came between her sons and their wives. In the last few decades of her life, her role as the matriarch of the family diminished. Odette retired to the countryside, living at the Queen's Lodge, which her beloved husband Edmund had gifted her. Odette died in 1829, at the Queen's Lodge, in the presence of her granddaughter, the reigning Queen Mary II. Odette outlived her sons George, Edmund, and Octavius. Odette is remembered as the most important queen consort from the House of Wittenberg, due to her large role in Windenburg politics before and after her husband's reign.