G General

Prayer Cushion

Prayer Cushion
Details
Features
Contents
Reviews

“On the high altar in each temple there is supposedly a large golden circle, the symbol of Priest-Kings, a symbol of eternity, of a thing without beginning or end." Dancer of G.

Useable as personal cult items or to further adorn a Priest King Temple, the Prayer Cushions included come in two variants: a Low Caste one textured in wood and canvas,and a High Caste one in engraved stone and velvet, the latter included in Green, Red, Blue and Black variants.

Three different male/female praying and kneeling animations are included, and each cushion, when clicked, gives wearable prayer beads with the circle symbol of the Priest Kings.

Designed for the Priest Kings cult but perfectly useable in any high to low medieval or renaissance church or cathedral.

Trident has been designing and creating ancient and medieval builds since 2007. The inspiration for our work comes from our passion for medieval reenactment and research of historic houses, ships, furniture, jewelry and clothing.

Trident builds are fully supported and continually updated to increase detail and reduce prim count making use of custom sculpts and texturing, and unique scripts and animations.

Laufey Markstein
June 2011

See item in Second Life
  • 3 Different Praying Animations
  • Blue,Green,Black,Red Versions Included
  • Animation can be adjusted to match AV size
  • Gives Prayer Beads
Average rating: full star full star empty star empty star empty star
  • 5 star:
  • 4 star:
  • 3 star:
  • 2 star:
  • 1 star:
No Modify - Not as Advetised
full star full star empty star empty star empty star Posted February 08, 2020 by SamuelJohn Weston

The item is identified as copy, modify, but no transfer. The items received are "no modify". There are three animations, but they are not contained within the same cushion, so one must rez either a male cushion, or a female cushion, and "high" or "low" for each animation.. The animation for male is more like "genuflect", as one might do prior to entering the pew from the aisle before the altar. Sadly, not as advertised.

Was this review helpful?