Resource Chest #81311 (50/50)
The piercing eye of a werecat.
This is paper made from wheat.
These laces are made of leather and would be great for lacing not only shoes but also bodices, jerkins, or other items that need to be cinched.
They're pretty tacky.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
Best not to think about this one for too long...
Mica is formed in layers of crystals, and is useful in various everyday construction purposes but also as an element of earth or wind magic, particularly in summoning elementals.
This feather is cold to the touch and remarkably heavy for a feather.
Someone took their time weaving this sturdy hemp twine.
This tankard usually holds drinks like beer or grog, and is made of oak.
Goblins craft these stones to store various cursed magic. This one glows with a strange brownish light.
This is the crude beginning of table salt. Source: Mine
The heaviest of common metals, lead primarily is used in practical non-magical ways. Due to is poisonous nature, it also finds its way into various potions with nefarious purposes.
Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
This ooze is gooey, slippery, and glows a faint green.
This tankard usually holds drinks like beer or grog, and is made of oak.
This piece of sheet music glows with a reddish light, and you get the feeling you don't want to hear the music on it.
This is a tincture made from Ghoul Eyeballs. Yum!
Paper made from oak logs.
This fork has 4 tines, and would be perfect for skewering food or perhaps being wielded by a very tiny demon.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
This is an ingot made from smelting iron objects down.
This is alcohol made from distilling wheat. It's alchemy-grade, so you probably don't want to drink it.
This bit of leather has been crafted to lash things together.
You are already imagining all the craft projects you could be doing with this puce yarn.
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
This bowl was hand-carved from a solid piece of oak.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
A small bundle of twigs from a witch's broomstick.
This is a hand-hewn flint arrowhead that was likely at the tip of an arrow or spear at one time.
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 die has been cast many times, and you wonder how much luck it has left in it.
Because of their intensely long lives, crocus jaws are not an easy thing to come by.
A simple but well-made iron earring.
This lute is made of gold and aspen wood, and plays beautifully.
What ancient civilization crafted this stone idol is impossible to guess, but the lion visage holds a majesty and wonder.
This book is badly burned, and it's difficult to tell what the contents might have been.
This very fine silk scarf is tinted blue.
The culture from the island of Hypnos produced fantastic idols. This is one of them.
This candy is designed to mimic the shape of a piece of corn.
This is a somewhat ornate gold ring with a crest of some forgotten family.
A fine iron cog that might go into a clock or steam mechanism of some kind.
This button is made from a lustrous oak wood, and is in good shape.
This is a torch enchanted for dark arts rituals, and the flame generally burns purple or green.
Copper cups fell out of fashion when it was discovered certain kinds of potent grog could react with the metal to create poison. You wonder how many people were poisoned by this one.
There's no way to tell what kind of vine this is until you water it and give it some sunlight.
Considered a lucky gemstone, jade helps instill prosperity and wealth in those that covet it.
This spring, while once clearly finely made and very springy, is now rusted and probably unreliable.
This die has been cast many times, and you wonder how much luck it has left in it.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.