Resource Chest #44991 (48/50)
This tankard has some unpleasant green stains on it.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
This phial is made of Moon Crystal, and any liquid stored inside will be imbued with its magical qualities.
The plumber who crafted this tubing is either brilliant or insane.
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
For a creature that is part jackrabbit and part antelope, these eggs look surprisingly normal.
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
These jackalope eggs do not smell good.
This thing smells a little fishy.
(0)
The piercing eye of a werecat.
This tiny little trinket allegedly conveys good luck, but whether it only works on gnomes is a matter of conjecture.
An ancient unknown race carved strange glyphs into this piece of limestone.
This candy is designed to mimic the shape of a piece of corn.
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.
(0)
Crafted in some dark place where nameless beasts stood watching, the void pyramids give off an eerie hum and are cold to the touch.
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.
As if worms couldn't get any more gross, this one is missing all of the pigment in its flesh.
A mosquito is perfectly preserved in amber, and you wonder how old it is.
Apparently someone saw red, and then smashed whatever this was.
These are shards of purple glass. They're pretty but sharp!
This goop is grey, dense, and unpleasant, and it came off of a Frog. Hopefully from the outside of the frog.
This bell makes a tinny sound.
Bore worms do extremely unpleasant things to flesh, and should be avoided.
These antlers were dropped by a deer of somewhat advanced age.
Everyone's favorite fall food! Source: Wild Knoll
A well designed plate of stiff leather useful in making armor.
The feathers of the scarlet snipe are a rarified commodity.
Centaurs cut off their manes for various ceremonial purposes, and then are coveted and traded by magic users for their various properties.
The broxa is a supposedly mythical beast, but this beak makes you think maybe they're real after all.
This ooze is gooey, slippery, and glows a faint green.
A large Fang from a Large Spider.
This tiny torch was crafted and meant to be carried by a pixie.
Elves are known for their precision in crafting hourglasses, some with magical powers.
Several hoops of thin iron are linked together to form a chain.
A fine iron cog that might go into a clock or steam mechanism of some kind.
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.
This feather is cold to the touch and remarkably heavy for a feather.
The buoyant, light brown substance obtained from the outer layer of the bark of the cork oak fashioned into a tapered cylinder for the purposes of plugging bottles or holes.
This button is made from a lustrous oak wood, and is in good shape.
Knapweed flourishes in cold arid climates, and these seeds would need to be planted in such a place to flourish.
A piece of fine blank parchment, fit for library scribes and illuminators to use in their work.
These shards could have come from a green bottle, or a green drinking glass, or a sculpture of a dragon devouring a bowl of broccoli.
Without extensive testing, it's hard to say if this bell will jingle all the way or only part of the way.
This soft fleece from a Gryffon glows with an ethereal light.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.