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Докладване на проблем с превода
Well, unless said NPC is a vampire, then they sleep in ash given the horrible facial dirt masks Bethesda gave them
I think soap let alone shampoo even existed back then . A milk bath was popular for rich poeple ( female for the most part ) on the belief it kept them looking youthful longer .
washing clothes usually meant soaking them ( I assume in water ) then rubbing your clothes
on a rock or washboard , rinse then hang on anything that makes do as a clothes line . of course if you're a rick bugger , your servants or slaves did it for your .
No info how to clean amour .
Also, this was a genuine request, since such bot-users may get even less soap and sunshine than a medieval prisoner.
Soap existed, sort of, but it wasn't soap as we know it, it was either herbal balls you let soak in basins of water (look tudor soap), or caustic (lye) soap used for washing...
The idea that poor people didn't use caustic soap to clean their clothes is weird, they bashed the clothes against rocks or washboards to get the soap OUT....