stonemason77 Resident's Total Resources
One of the oldest of healing stones, agate was used in ancient civilizations to bring warriors strength and make them victorious in battle.
As if worms couldn't get any more gross, this one is missing all of the pigment in its flesh.
This aluminum plating could be useful in making armor or repairing various metal household objects.
If you eat the correct type of Amanita, it's delicious. If you eat the wrong type, it's a trip to the infirmary. Choose wisely! Source: Wild Knoll
A mosquito is perfectly preserved in amber, and you wonder how old it is.
A version of coal that is extremely compressed and metallic, anthracite became a favorite of dark wizards and practicers of the black arts.
Made from ground-up Sage Thistle, this is a very smelly, very good spice.
This orb glows and swirls with a mesmerizing azure light.
These taste nothing like banana candy! Source: Wild Knoll
A power stone, basalt is most often used in creating inextinguishable fires.
This leaf is a standard in spice creation. Source: Wild Knoll
Don't eat the seeds. Source: Farm Knoll
This is used to make black pepper. Source: Wild Knoll
It's like a chocolate chip cookie but with that extra ingredient vampires crave.
The claws of the blood crab are sharp and make a unique clicking sound.
Heart and blood spells have many uses for the bloodstone, which also is key to various magics relating to vampirism.
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
Overshadowed by their iron and steel cousins, bolts made of brass still maintain a healthy presence in the steampunk construction market.
This bell definitely looks like it could almost all the way.
Choppin' it is pretty fun. Source: Wild Knoll
A small bundle of twigs from a witch's broomstick.
A sturdy clay tile, with a basic pattern on it.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
This butter has been churned quite recently and is very fresh.
This candy is designed to mimic the shape of a piece of corn.
A favorite of rabbits everywhere. Source: Farm Knoll
Where the swamp creatures swim around before getting digested by the Cave Goblin.
An extremely common stone, it mainly is used in everyday purposes but finds its way into the occasional sand or desert magic component.
This egg was laid by an ordinary chicken.
Clay is useful for the creation of pots, tiles, and is useful in some earth magic.
These shards were once part of a whole. Now they're just a whole lotta parts.
This was once a cloak of invisibility but has faded into a solid form, apparently permanently.
When dead plant matter decays over millions years, we get this useful energy source.
Dark and delicious. Somehow when you harvested them they instantly also became dried and roasted beans. It's magic! Source: Wild Knoll
The most common coinage of the realm, the copper coin forms the basis of the economy.
A plain copper medallion, just waiting to be inscribed or enchanted.
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.
Due to its odor, which is like the smell of a rotting corpse or carcass, the titan arum is characterized as a carrion flower, and is also known as the corpse flower or corpse plant.
Crayfish chitin has various medicinal and magical purposes, including making plasters that minimize the severity of scars.
This is a feather from the Cyan Lovebird, also known as the 'Lost Lovebird' due to its somber blue tones.
These antlers were dropped by a deer of somewhat advanced age.
This is a pile of common dust, useful for sneezing or making homes look dirty.
It's like a human ribcage, only smaller.
This glowing mineral is vital to the crafting and recharging of magical items.
Like a prism, ethereal opal splits and refracts energies from other sources, bringing them to the surface for examination and direction to other places.
Ripe, red, delicious, what else can you ask for? Source: Farm Knoll
This tincture is made from field strawberries and wheat ethanol.
This fishing rod has a dark curse upon it. And it smells a bit swampy.
This is a hand-hewn flint arrowhead that was likely at the tip of an arrow or spear at one time.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.