Resource Chest #36780 (39/50)
This aluminum plating could be useful in making armor or repairing various metal household objects.
A fine grass screen, useful for catching fish or preventing debris from blowing into your house.
Angels make the finest harps, and then leave them behind when they decide to ditch their halos for horns.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
This fork has 4 tines, and would be perfect for skewering food or perhaps being wielded by a very tiny demon.
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 is a basic iron cauldron, not very expensive but well made.
You wonder where the rest of this very tiny skeleton ended up, leaving behind only the head.
Apparently someone saw red, and then smashed whatever this was.
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Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
You check this dreamcatcher but there don't seem to be any dreams caught in it. Yet.
These special anise seeds can be used for seasoning, or crafting expectorant or upset stomach remedy.
This soap smells musky and produces a fine lather.
The benefit of tin pegs is that they are lightweight. The downside is that they are tin.
This resin is blue, and very sticky.
A mosquito is perfectly preserved in amber, and you wonder how old it is.
This powder is a residue leftover from Rainbow Sprites as they frolic in the forest.
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 pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
There's no way to tell what kind of vine this is until you water it and give it some sunlight.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
Gnome bones are curiously tough, and these are no exception.
This soap smells musky and produces a fine lather.
This aluminum plating could be useful in making armor or repairing various metal household objects.
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.
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This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
This sturdy corkscrew is great for screwing and unscrewing corks.
Someone took their time weaving this sturdy hemp twine.
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
The plumber who crafted this tubing is either brilliant or insane.
As if worms couldn't get any more gross, this one is missing all of the pigment in its flesh.
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