Resource Chest #39205 (25/25)
Stronger and more tensile than common cotton, the brute variety is prized by weavers and clothiers.
Centaurs cut off their manes for various ceremonial purposes, and then are coveted and traded by magic users for their various properties.
These are shards of purple glass. They're pretty but sharp!
This bell makes a tinny sound.
Do these look like a giant's toe, or did they grow in between their toes? No one knows for sure. Source: Wild Knoll
Made from ground-up Sage Thistle, this is a very smelly, very good spice.
This is refined salt crystals. Yum!
Knapweed flourishes in cold arid climates, and these seeds would need to be planted in such a place to flourish.
These berries are very nervous. Source: Farm Knoll
This a solid ingot of brass, smelted from ore or brass items.
This is great as a spice, and as an ingredient in joke sneeze powder.
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.
As if worms couldn't get any more gross, this one is missing all of the pigment in its flesh.
It looks like salt but it's sweet.
Don't let the word fungus dissuade you, this stuff tastes like fried gold.
These antlers were dropped by a deer of somewhat advanced age.
This pollen is a delicious seasoning and can also be used to fertilize the stamens of rockrose flowers, if that's your thing. Source: Wild Knoll
A small bundle of twigs from a witch's broomstick.
A sedimentary rock that is often composed of the skeletal fragments of marine organisms such as coral, foraminifera, and molluscs.
This is basic black ink used for writing enchanted scrolls.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
This is a basic iron cauldron, not very expensive but well made.
This bell definitely looks like it could almost all the way.
Overshadowed by their iron and steel cousins, bolts made of brass still maintain a healthy presence in the steampunk construction market.