spider eyesight, remaining nearsighted to various degrees and even partially blind. They tend to keep their hair long and woven into braids.
As every anadi produces at least a little silk, and weaving is a central focus of their culture, human anadi clothing is a point of pride. They do little to distinguish between genders in clothing, layering many thin silk robes, scarves, sashes, shirts, and cloaks in many bright colors. The brightest undyed whites are saved for special occasions. Anadi incorporate painted and engraved leather pieces into their tools and clothing.
Due to the bad eyesight many anadi have, eyeglasses and other vision-correcting or devices are relatively common, though they can be prohibitively expensive in Nurvatcha. Magical assistive devices are more widespread, and skilled glassmakers are rare but valued.
The few anadi who care to achieve a hybrid form appear to be thin, four-limbed humanoids with their spider coloring and heads, including fangs and venom, but with more human hands and height. In hybrid form, they can walk on webs and peel mangoes at the same time. Unfortunately, many other races see these hybrid forms as even more monstrous than full spider forms.
## Society
Anadi are known for their web families, groups of blood siblings born to groups of three to five parents. Several web families living close together form clutters, often comprised of several siblings and their own spouses and families. Anywhere from five to twenty families make up a single clutter, which are led by the oldest female in the group, a matriarch considered a stand-in for or bridge to the goddess Grandmother Spider. They practice a wide variety of trades and tend to keep apprenticeships inside themselves, though they have specialties.
Clutters living in the same location form a colony, of which there are eight in Nurvatcha.
In the past, colonies would choose a single web family to preside over them, and when
these families gathered to make decisions for the entire nation of Nurvatcha, not much
got done—“too many bells makes no music,” as the saying goes. After traveling through
the Mwangi Expanse and seeing their governments firsthand, the anadi altered their
structure. Now, each of the eight colonies elects a single anadi from anywhere in their
ranks to become a council member. Promising anadi are often lifted into prominence by their matriarchs and spend time visiting different clutters in their colony.
The anadi council of eight convenes in the central city of Domithari, built
high above the jungle floor. They meet inside a massive tree with a hollow
grown in the top. Their circular table is divided into ten. One portion is left
respectfully open for Grandmother Spider, though nobody actually expects
her to show up or intervene, and one portion is left for her most prominent
priest or oracle. The council often takes reports from experts in their field to make informed decisions.
When faced with a difficult problem, the council first asks for
research from Majabi about precedent and relevant information,
takes interviews from several members of relevant communities,
and listens to the diviners, weavers, and oracles who practice in
Grandmother Spider’s tradition. These weavers of fate confer with the
priest at the table to cast a single vote among them, a ninth vote that
ensures no decision ends in a tie. Lately, the council has been hearing
requests to add an official ninth colony and a tenth council member to
represent the anadi living outside Nurvatcha. Traditionalists worry that
it would upset the balance of the vote, but the arguments are gaining strength as more and more anadi settle northward.
Anadi towns are generally small and communally focused.
Whether on the coast, in the jungle, or on a cliff, anadi
settlements are built vertically as well as horizontally.
Anadi involved in construction weave a thick, fire-
resistant silk known as structure silk into beams,
supports, and walls. Homes are complexes of
spherical or drop-shaped rooms, decorated with
colored tapestries and cushions and hammocks, along
with the occasional lightweight wooden furniture. Homes often change size and shape depending on the family’s needs.
##### Anadi Silks
Though at first glance, all the silk that anadi spin is similar, this couldn’t be further from the truth. Spinners differentiate between four major types of silk, though each can be separated into even more types.
Structure silk is woven into walls, docks, and scaffolding. It is fire-resistant and takes skill to make and work with.
Water silk can be woven tightly together to create watertight fabric, used for rain canopies, lining boats, and making buckets.
Wick silk catches on fire quickly and burns easily but slowly, ideal for lanterns.
Weaving silk is the most versatile kind of silk. It takes dye well and is used for clothing, writing, decorations, and most other applications.