Resource Chest #82646 (25/25)
The plumber who crafted this tubing is either brilliant or insane.
There's no way to tell what kind of vine this is until you water it and give it some sunlight.
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
This sturdy corkscrew is great for screwing and unscrewing corks.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
These are freshly picked Fergal Flowers.
This is a fine silk scarf, dyed purple with some sort of plant pigment.
This is a coinage used by Minotaurs, though where and when nobody can say.
This is a very sturdy bolt, made of iron.
A large Fang from a Large Spider.
It's as if a stained glass window depicting a bowl of oranges was smashed into bits.
Apparently someone saw red, and then smashed whatever this was.
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
A fine grass screen, useful for catching fish or preventing debris from blowing into your house.
Gnome bones are curiously tough, and these are no exception.
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 was once a cloak of invisibility but has faded into a solid form, apparently permanently.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
This was once a powerful ring of healing.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
This aluminum plating could be useful in making armor or repairing various metal household objects.
This is a basic iron cauldron, not very expensive but well made.
This resin is blue, and very sticky.
You wonder where the rest of this very tiny skeleton ended up, leaving behind only the head.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.