Comments are made using translation software.
We have received numerous requests for tabi socks, so we have produced them.
As the range of sizes is quite broad, it's currently undecided how far we'll go with sizing.
For women's sizes, we're aiming for around 8 sizes, similarly for men's sizes, and children's sizes are yet to be determined.
We're not aiming for the larger EEE sizes commonly available; instead, we're drafting patterns around D to E sizes.
For the metal fasteners (kohaze), we've included 5, but feel free to adjust the number to 3 or 4 as desired.
If you wish to create authentic tabi socks for traditional Japanese attire, please use high-quality thread and materials.
Feel free to create originals with your favorite fabrics or customize them to your liking. We've provided symbols to make the sewing process as easy to follow as possible, so once you get used to it, it should be quite simple.
After printing, paste it according to the pasting line,Cut and use.
The pattern has a seam allowance, so it can be used as is.
The site hosted thousands of PDFs, including core rulebooks, adventure modules, sourcebooks, and splatbooks for popular systems like Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, Call of Cthulhu, and countless indie games.
The true power of "The Eye" was its incredible breadth and depth. The site's organization was its greatest strength, mirroring the structure of a well-kept physical library. Its public/Books/rpg.rem.uz/ directory was a treasure trove housing material for over .
The synergy between the Rpg.rem.uz collection and The Eye highlights the ongoing debate surrounding digital copyright versus cultural preservation. From a legal standpoint, the distribution of these PDFs often infringes on the intellectual property of publishers. Many creators argue that such sites hurt their ability to make a living. Conversely, preservationists argue that without these archives, thousands of niche gaming books would vanish into obscurity as companies go bankrupt or licenses expire.
. While serving as a major, free repository, the mirror has faced recent reliability issues due to infrastructure failures. Access the archive via The-Eye.eu or through the Reddit torrent link
The site gained legendary status on tabletop communities like Reddit's r/rpg and 4chan's /tg/ (Traditional Games) board because of its clean layout. It eschewed ad-heavy file lockers or premium download speeds, offering a direct, high-speed index of neatly categorized folders. When the original standalone domain eventually went offline due to hosting and legal challenges, data hoarders scrambled to prevent the loss of its contents. Integration Into The Eye Rpg.rem.uz The Eye
The Eye focuses on tracking, hoarding, and serving publicly available or culturally significant data that is at risk of vanishing from the web. They integrated the complete historical snapshot of the defunct site into their public book repository. For years, users could browse the curated directory directly via the The Eye Public Books Archive. The Lineage of TTRPG Archival Sites
Many out-of-print, obscure, or classic, old-school (OSR) games were preserved on this site, preventing them from being completely lost to time.
Legend says it is the uploaded consciousness of an ancient Dungeon Master, or perhaps a rogue AI designed to perfectly balance the world through calculated suffering. It does not sleep; it only watches. It is said that The Eye holds the "Source Code of Fate"—a legendary drop that allows a player to rewrite one event in their character's history.
To truly grasp the scope of the rpg.rem.uz archive, one must look at the evidence of what it once contained. The directory was meticulously organized by game system, a structure that remains mirrored in the backups and references found across the internet today. The site hosted thousands of PDFs, including core
Handouts & Props
Before becoming permanently associated with The Eye, rpg.rem.uz was an independent, standalone repository hosted on a Russian domain ( .uz ). It served as a centralized clearinghouse for TTRPG materials, highly valued by players who could not afford expensive physical books or needed out-of-print reference documents.
Following the 2018 closure of the rpg.rem.uz TTRPG archive, The Eye (the-eye.eu) mirrored the collection to preserve years of community-curated materials. While the data is preserved via The Eye and Internet Archive mirrors, the repository has faced ongoing legal and technical instability. For more details on the archive's history and mirror status, visit
Despite this, many in the community saw "The Eye" as performing a vital service: preservation. The TTRPG industry has a spotty history, with many beloved supplements and entire game lines going out of print and becoming nearly impossible to find legally. In these cases, "The Eye" acted as a digital ark, ensuring that the creative work of the past wasn't lost to time. This tension between the desire for open access to information and the need to support creators is a defining feature of the digital age, and no site embodied this conflict more than rpg.rem.uz. Its public/Books/rpg
Key features of "The Eye" on Rpg.rem.uz included:
Furthermore, decentralized communities have created torrent files of the entire rpg.rem.uz collection. This ensures that even if The Eye were ever to face the same legal fate as the original, the data would live on across thousands of individual hard drives in a peer-to-peer format.
**Item: The Silk
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By proving that thousands of classic tabletop games were at risk of becoming lost media, rpg.rem.uz forced the gaming community to take digital archiving seriously. The preservation backups kept by The Eye ensure that even if individual websites disappear, the historic rulebooks that shaped the tabletop industry remain preserved for future generations.
When The Trove launched roughly six months after rem.uz vanished, users instantly recognized the identical directory tree. The creators of The Trove used the original rem.uz torrent data to build their foundational library, eventually expanding it into a much larger repository. 4. Preservation vs. Piracy: The Ongoing Debate