Tips &
Tricks
1. Trash Barrel Deco
This method is the way I tend to do all my deco.
It is a way of placing any item or group of items onto a particular
tile. It is the easiest way to stack a bunch of chests or place a
painting on a wall in the exact position you want first time, every
time. The only condition is you need to be able to 'stand' on the tile
to place the barrel. In the case of a painting stand on the tile
in front of the part of the wall you wish to place it on.

You will find the items will generally stack in the
order you place them in the barrel. So first item in is the one on top
of the stack when the barrel is chopped. In the picture above I have
placed the rose, butterfly, bowl and table in the barrel, chopped the
barrel so all items fall to the one tile, and then lock, lifted and
turned the items to the desired positions. The barrel method is
sometimes the only way you may place two 'blessed' items on the same
tile, without getting a 'blocking' message, ie two vet reward statuettes
that you want one above the other.
Another use for the trash barrel in deco is raising
deeded items that you cannot normally lock and lift, or that fall under
particular floor tiles, such as gozas on front steps or banner deeds
that sit too low down, etc.

In this case I have demonstrated the difference with a
stag deed, in the first picture both stag heads are targeted directly on
the tile in front of each door, in the second the first is targeted on
the barrel placed on the tile in front of the door and the second is as
per its original placement. As you can see in the second pic the
stag head targeted on the barrel is higher in its placement. Using
the barrel as a targeting tool means that placing gozas on steps,
especially those inside a castle or keep at the top of the stairs may be
done without the goza disappearing under the stairs. Place the barrel
where you want the goza and target it with the goza and it will sit
nicely on the tile you want. Just chop the barrel away after placement.
The only real 'caution' you need to take if using the
trash barrel method to place, is to understand that if you place
something in the barrel and lose connection for whatever reason, you
need to get back in before the item is deleted in the barrel. This
is a risk you take using this method to place. You may use wooden
crates or boxes to do the same thing by placing items in them and then
chopping the crate with an axe, however you need a large supply of them
if you are doing a lot of deco as each time you chop a crate you will
need to get another for the next placement. The beauty of the
trash barrel is you can use it over and over without wasting materials
on building and then destroying crates or boxes.
2. The Beauty of Gozas
The use of gozas in deco is a must. They may be
used in all manner of ways and have allowed a lot of additional deco
tricks to be used to get some great affects and to put things in places
where they have never before been able to be put. The following
are some tips and tricks with using gozas in your deco.
2a. Flipping Gozas
When gozas (made by tailors) first came in as a deco
item, I, like many thought wow, finally something to put on the
floor of my Castle to take away the boring stone look. So having
carpeted a few rooms and placing a few bear and polar rugs, I left home
to return to find those rugs had 'flipped' under the gozas so it became
every second 'log-in' that I could see my rugs, the alternate days they
were 'under' the gozas. This was aggravating to say the least, but
having persisted with various attempts at getting them to 'rise' and to
stay above the gozas permanently I finally figured it out. The
trick works for anything such as bear rugs, abbatoirs, arcane circles
etc that do this 'flipping' business if placed directly on goza
carpeting.

Firstly, using any colour single gozas place them 3 x 3
across/down. Then raise them all with 2 lifts with the deco tool.
(not more than 2 if you still wish to walk on them, as above 2 lifts
they will block movement). Place the rug, arcane or abbatoir on the
raised gozas, chop out the gozas you can see, and to get the other one
out from under the middle either mount and dismount, or leave house and
return to force it to 'flip'. Chop this last one away. Place the
'real' goza carpet under the rug, in this case I used black gozas as my
'carpet'. The bonus of raising them like this is you also do away with
the unsightly 'lines' you tend to get even when placing directly on some
floor surfaces.
You may use gozas to place these items higher if you do
not wish to walk on them. In the picture below, the arcane circle
is placed above black goza and may be walked over and used as a circle
for gaining a spellweaving focus, but the abbatoirs which are on the
corner roofs of my castle have been raised, about 7 lifts on each goza,
so that they are dead centre of the squares instead of to one side, or
'offset' to square, if they were placed normally.

Remember, when using gozas this way if a 'piece' of your
rug or circle etc drops at any point to raise it level with the other
pieces before attempting to chop it out with an axe back to deed form or
it will be destroyed. When re-deeding, all the parts of the deeded
item need to be on the same level.
2b. Raising & Stacking Deeded Addons with Gozas
Another really useful deco trick using gozas is to
'stack' or 'raise' deeded items so that you can maximise your floor
space, or 'see' those hidden placements behind walls, thus also saving
space.

To stack aquariums, place 2 gozas on the tiles you wish
your aquariums to be. Raise them 10 times each with the deco tool and
place your first aquarium by targeting the western side goza, then place
the other aquarium on the tiles where your gozas sat initially before
lifting.
This can also be done with any 'deeded' item such as
water troughs and stone tables. If you cant 'see' a goza to chop out
after placement, it doesn't matter it will stay hidden, and doesn't take
a up a lockdown.
One of the real benefits to this trick is it allows you
to place deeded item on the tiles closest to an eastern wall and have
them raised so that you can actually see the item, most things placed on
those tiles end up being 'behind' the wall so can only be seen with
circle of transparency on. While this is ok if you don't actually
want to see the item, if you do, until now you have been forced to move
it out a tile to make it visible. Gozas allow you to raise these
items allowing you to use those tiles. Examples of this benefit are
shown below.

1. This water trough used as a display case would be
hidden behind the wall if not raised with gozas. Raise gozas to
the maximum height then drop them back down by 2-3 with the tool
before placing the trough, this allows placing of items on top of the
troughs.
2. This water trough has been raised and then had the
royal blue gozas and sword placed on before under placing with the rest
of the display cases.
3. In Castles where there are only 3 tiles in width in
the wings, a table placed on the tile closest to the eastern wall would
only show the very edge if not lifted. In this pic the tables have been
raised as per the trough in [1] to allow the tabletop to be used for
display, while allowing you to walk up the centre tile to 'view' the
display.
2c. Splitting Deeded Addons with Gozas
Another useful thing about being able to raise addons
this way, is by then dropping the gozas with the deco tool, once the item
is positioned,
you can 'split' the addon into parts. Below shows the
process for splitting a 3 tile table, also shown is the southern three
pieces of an abbatoir, once the remaining pieces were chopped away and
then the height raised to match two tables forming a 'lip'. Basically,
place gozas, raise, place the addon, then lower the gozas to force the
'split' then chop away the gozas and bits of the addon you don't wish to
use.

This works for nearly
all multi-tile addons (ie: that sit on more than one tile) such as
tables, abbatoirs, arcane circles, pentagrams etc. You must remember
when doing this that once you 'chop' out a bit of an addon it is gone
for good and the addon cannot be re-deeded so there is a lot of 'waste'
when trying to get things right! (Unless all parts are still there and
the parts are on the same level when 'chopping' to re-deed it will be
destroyed.) This is handy for when you want to make 'special' items such
as long tables etc. Examples below:

In the above pictures you have two 'altered' tables, one
in plain stone which forms a cross, the other in shadow which forms a T
shape. In the first case the 'long' part of the tables have had the
'ends' removed so you don't have multiple 'table legs' showing, nor gaps
in the cross pieces. The beauty of this is that your table tops form one
united slab, the drawback is obviously if you try to 'move' the tables
they will be destroyed as parts are 'missing'. Luckily stone is an
item which any miner/stonemason can replace for nil cost other than
'time'.
2d. Using Gozas to place deeded items or furniture on
tiles not normally able to be placed on.
You can also place deeded items on tiles you can't
normally place on like the the stair handrails or battlement edges in
castles, keeps and towers or any 'fixed' structure in a custom
house. Examples below:

Top: The two gozas placed against the stairwell are not
normally able to be walked on. You can place items of a single
tile nature by dropping the item on them, however to place a two tile
deeded item you will always get an 'unable to be constructed message'
unless you use gozas. As shown, place the gozas, raise them to
above the level of the handrail. Place your water trough.
Targeting the very edge of the goza that you can 'just' see, use your
deco tool to drop the west side as shown. Once the item is 'split'
each piece maybe lowered to the desired position is obtained. Here
I have lowered both sides to the ground. These unusable tiles are now
useable by the trough and don't block movement as you couldn't walk
there anyway!
Bottom: Placing deeded addons on the castle battlements
as indicated by the two white crosses. Firstly put on circle of
transparency (circ) and place two gozas directly behind the part of wall
you wish to place the items, you can see a '1/4' tile against the wall
with circ on. Raise the gozas until they are above the height of
the wall and turn circ off to check that the whole goza is visible.
Place your deeded item and then chop the gozas away. You may then
lower the item to the correct position. The ability to place deeded
items like this, especially on the narrow parts of castles, allows you
to deco without taking up all your floor space with 'blocking' items.