I propose a return to a pre-3E version of Rings of Protection by combining the deflection and resistance bonuses to encourage more use of other cloaks. This would require increasing the costs on the rings of course, and still leave one ring slot "tied up" with a critical item. Since you have 2 ring slots though, this isn't so bad as having a singular cloak slot "tied up" with the cloak of resistance.

Jason Bulmahn

Lead Designer

Paizo Publishing cloaks /rings of protection should REPLACE cloaks or resistance, this would give us ONE item that gives a plus to AC AND saving throws.I remember seeing things like ring of protection +3, +1 saves 10' radius and things like that.


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Count me in as in favor of this change. I'd be fine with there being BOTH cloaks of protection (that do both) and rings of protection (that do both), like in 1st Ed. A lot of neato cloaks never get used because the basic item is just too good to pass up.

Yay! More SAAS! I have two circle cloaks, both are full circles -- that is, two of these kind of half circles sewn together. (Well, the longer one is pieced from pie shaped wedges...but it is a full circle. Neither has an attached hood. I find the knee length cloak to be extremely useful and I wear it a lot (It actually was made fro the husband, but I scorp it now and then) The full length circle is made of wool and so therefor it's kind of water resistant, and you really only want to wear it during bad weather because it is bulky. I'll hunt through my fabric stash and see if I have any fabric to make this from (and if not, I'll go get some fleece! I NEED a half circle cloak with a hood made of fleece, I really do! The cloak project I have been putting off is a rectangular cloak attached to a hood. I keep buying lining fabric and then using the lining fabric for something else! Doh! The outer fabric for the cloak is red wool, which I got on sale at an amazing price.

Just wanted to say thanks for doing these posts - they're great! And cloaks are wonderful. And if you need a costume in a hurry, a short half-circle cloak out of a yard and a half of red felt makes an excellent Red Riding Hood, with no hemming :)

Step out in real Celtic style with our stunning selection of Irish wool capes & cloaks designed in Ireland. Our Irish shawls & wool ponchos are crafted with the finest fabrics such as cashmere & wool.For those who prefer an added touch of luxury, we have an exquisite array of wool capes like our popular Green Pure Irish Wool Country Walking Cape. Whichever you select, know you're adding a striking addition to your winter wardrobe with an iconic Irish look.

r ranson wrote:Are Cloaks, and their baby cousins, capes, practical on the homestead? Are they fashionable enough yet to wear in town? 

 

 What's your experience wearing a cloak (or cape)? (both good and bad)

 

 Across many different cultures and most of the time we've been human, people have worn cloaks of some sort or other. To keep warm, to keep cool, to protect from the elements, as wearable sleeping bags or tents for long journeys. It was not until the labour and fabric shortage of the early 20th Century, that capes start to fade away. I think the central heating of the 1970s/80s really finished cloaks off as fashionable clothing in North America. 

 

 I've been toying with the question: If I had a cloak, would I wear it? And when?

 


Once thought just to be the product of the imagination, invisibility cloaks are getting closer to becoming reality due to the modern science of meta-materials. Early invisibility devices used a combination of lenses and mirrors to bend the light around an object to make it appear invisible, as shown below. Making these required a knowledge of geometrical optics, and in particular the mathematics of angles and trigonometry.

Invisibility cloaks themselves rely on meta materials, which have been engineered to produce properties that don't occur naturally. Light is electromagnetic radiation, made up of vibrations of electric and magnetic fields. Natural materials usually only affect the electric component, but meta-materials can affect the magnetic component too, expanding the range of interactions that are possible. The meta materials used in attempts to make invisibility cloaks are made up of a lattice with the spacing between elements less than the wavelength of the light, which can then be bent by the material. 17dc91bb1f

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