LadyEdain Posted February 24 Report Posted February 24 Not sure if this is true for every roof type, but these are roof bottoms (eaves) in slate. They are clearly just the bottom half of a normal slanted block, but they need to be in the upper half of the block entity in order to join up with the row above and be a proper eave. If I'm missing some step to make these line up correctly, someone please tell me, because I can't figure it out. It looks like a design error to me. Also, there are no outer corner eaves, so for my tower with a hipped roof, I had to use full-size blocks as an overhang, because there were no outer corner eaves to match the regular ones (not that the regular ones line up anyway).
LadyWYT Posted February 24 Report Posted February 24 13 minutes ago, LadyEdain said: If I'm missing some step to make these line up correctly, someone please tell me, because I can't figure it out. It looks like a design error to me. Try looking up the roof top rather than the roof bottom. The name is a bit goofy, but it's referring to the specific part of the roof block itself, rather than how it looks on a build.
LadyEdain Posted February 24 Author Report Posted February 24 2 hours ago, LadyWYT said: Try looking up the roof top rather than the roof bottom. The name is a bit goofy, but it's referring to the specific part of the roof block itself, rather than how it looks on a build. I made some per your suggestion, and they do attach at the bottom of the previous row, like they should, but they still don't look right because they don't have a shingle overhang like the bottom pieces do. Or left and right end pieces to match the ones for the regular roof pieces. I think bottom eaves (with edge pieces) are just missing.
EnbyKaiju Posted February 24 Report Posted February 24 Yeah, I agree the point that there should be a version of that part of the block but at the top of the block so it flows on from the block adjactent to it There are some blocks that do that with edge pieces, but I don't think we've got a simple "it juts out, continuing the ramp" feel.
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