Resource Chest #11753 (25/25)
This tankard usually holds drinks like beer or grog, and is made of oak.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
This tankard has some unpleasant green stains on it.
A bone from some mystery canine.
You are already imagining all the craft projects you could be doing with this puce yarn.
A small bundle of twigs from a witch's broomstick.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
For a creature that is part jackrabbit and part antelope, these eggs look surprisingly normal.
This candle is made of white wax, and looks to only have been lit once or twice.
The feathers of the scarlet snipe are a rarified commodity.
Overshadowed by their iron and steel cousins, bolts made of brass still maintain a healthy presence in the steampunk construction market.
This yarn is finely woven and stained with Indian Paintbrush pigment to be bright red.
This is a torch enchanted for dark arts rituals, and the flame generally burns purple or green.
This cluster of strange parasites writhes and pulses.
A well designed plate of stiff leather useful in making armor.
This bell definitely looks like it could almost all the way.
Goblins craft these stones to store various cursed magic. This one glows with a strange brownish light.
While a gorgon's head can still turn you to stone, this claw merely smells bad and can give you a bad scratch if mishandled.
The benefit of tin pegs is that they are lightweight. The downside is that they are tin.
Centaurs cut off their manes for various ceremonial purposes, and then are coveted and traded by magic users for their various properties.
These jackalope eggs do not smell good.
This feather is cold to the touch and remarkably heavy for a feather.
Collect enough of these feathers and you could make a set of wings and fly too close to the sun and then plummet to your death.
This bowl was hand-carved from a solid piece of oak.