Resource Chest #11782 (49/50)
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
This eye was once alive, but after sitting in the eye socket of a ghoul for a while, it no longer is.
Crayfish chitin has various medicinal and magical purposes, including making plasters that minimize the severity of scars.
This string is rather poorly woven but should be sufficient to keep a kite under control in anything but gale-wind conditions.
This die has been cast many times, and you wonder how much luck it has left in it.
It's like a human ribcage, only smaller.
This ivory thread is pure white and has a lot of tensile strength to it.
This a solid ingot of brass, smelted from ore or brass items.
Jute is the second most valuable fabric fiber, behind cotton, due to its versatility. This is a ball of it.
A sturdy clay tile, with a basic pattern on it.
It's as if a stained glass window depicting a bowl of oranges was smashed into bits.
This tankard has some unpleasant green stains on it.
These shards of glass are a curious pink color.
A light and volcanic rock that is useful in exfoliants, plant substrates, and oddly the purpose of cleaning up magical spills and disasters.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
This resin is blue, and very sticky.
Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
Apparently someone saw red, and then smashed whatever this was.
A prismatic crystal that creates useful vibrations under certain magical circumstances, and is also quite pretty.
Generally attempting to retrieve the claw of a hellhound is a terrible idea, making them somewhat rarified.
A common stone, it is remarkably useful for consciousness-raising spells and items.
A stone excellent for flagstones and building.
An earth-energy stone, sardonyx is utilized in slow-moving but powerful spells and rites.
This candle is made of white wax, and looks to only have been lit once or twice.
Known for their impervious qualities, rock tortoise shells in days of yore were used to create dragon-fire-proof shields.
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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.
In addition to their spherical shape these sprouts have a vague chocolate flavor great for sauces.
Considered a lucky gemstone, jade helps instill prosperity and wealth in those that covet it.
When qualities of fluidity or cosmic mystery are needed for a spell, mercury is often relied upon.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
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.
This soap smells musky and produces a fine lather.
A mosquito is perfectly preserved in amber, and you wonder how old it is.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
The benefit of tin pegs is that they are lightweight. The downside is that they are tin.
A well designed plate of stiff leather useful in making armor.
You wonder if the owner of this molar is still alive, and if so, whether they are missing it.
This orb glows and swirls with a mesmerizing azure light.
Crafted in some dark place where nameless beasts stood watching, the void pyramids give off an eerie hum and are cold to the touch.
Overshadowed by their iron and steel cousins, bolts made of brass still maintain a healthy presence in the steampunk construction market.
A soft metal with an often mirror-like surface, tin is useful where malleable metals are of value and is also needed in various enchanted inks, engravings, and spells for communicating with the dead.
Clear quartz is used primarily as an amplifier of energy, hence being combined often with other stones or magic sources.
This bowl was hand-carved from a solid piece of oak.
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
Considered a very workaday metal, in addition to the practical construction purposes, aluminum carries energy well and is useful as a magical conductor in wands and staves.