Resource Chest #2682 (25/25)
This yarn is finely woven and stained with Indian Paintbrush pigment to be bright red.
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.
It's like a human ribcage, only smaller.
Generally attempting to retrieve the claw of a hellhound is a terrible idea, making them somewhat rarified.
The benefit of tin pegs is that they are lightweight. The downside is that they are tin.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
Goblins craft these stones to store various cursed magic. This one glows with a strange brownish light.
A well designed plate of stiff leather useful in making armor.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
You really can't beat an iron pail when it comes to hauling water from a well.
Gnome bones are curiously tough, and these are no exception.
This tankard has some unpleasant green stains on it.
The broxa is a supposedly mythical beast, but this beak makes you think maybe they're real after all.
This spring, while once clearly finely made and very springy, is now rusted and probably unreliable.
This mask belonged to a Titan, a cadre of extremely well trained soldiers from a far away island.
This feather is cold to the touch and remarkably heavy for a feather.
This is a basic iron cauldron, not very expensive but well made.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
This bit of leather has been crafted to lash things together.
This stone tells of the death of a certain elf, whose name you don't know because you can't read elven.
When pins won't do the trick, a voodoo pick is a useful item in dark magic.
Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
This is great as a spice, and as an ingredient in joke sneeze powder.