Resource Chest #51759 (47/50)
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
Without extensive testing, it's hard to say if this bell will jingle all the way or only part of the way.
This tiny little trinket allegedly conveys good luck, but whether it only works on gnomes is a matter of conjecture.
If you hammer this nail into something, it will stay there.
Generally attempting to retrieve the claw of a hellhound is a terrible idea, making them somewhat rarified.
A power stone, basalt is most often used in creating inextinguishable fires.
This bell makes a tinny sound.
This bell definitely looks like it could almost all the way.
An all purpose chain made of sturdy well cast iron.
This goop is grey, dense, and unpleasant, and it came off of a Frog. Hopefully from the outside of the frog.
Centaurs cut off their manes for various ceremonial purposes, and then are coveted and traded by magic users for their various properties.
Knapweed flourishes in cold arid climates, and these seeds would need to be planted in such a place to flourish.
Goblins craft these stones to store various cursed magic. This one glows with a strange brownish light.
These antlers were dropped by a deer of somewhat advanced age.
This orb glows and swirls with a mesmerizing azure light.
An ancient unknown race carved strange glyphs into this piece of limestone.
This silver candlestick is only slightly tarnished and would go well in any bedroom or dinner setting.
This is a basic iron cauldron, not very expensive but well made.
While a gorgon's head can still turn you to stone, this claw merely smells bad and can give you a bad scratch if mishandled.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
An extremely common stone, it mainly is used in everyday purposes but finds its way into the occasional sand or desert magic component.
Clear quartz is used primarily as an amplifier of energy, hence being combined often with other stones or magic sources.
Peridot is a stone often used in amulets and spells related to learning new skills and knowledge.
A stone excellent for flagstones and building.
Clay is useful for the creation of pots, tiles, and is useful in some earth magic.
This is the crude beginning of table salt. Source: Mine
One of the oldest of healing stones, agate was used in ancient civilizations to bring warriors strength and make them victorious in battle.
A common stone, it is remarkably useful for consciousness-raising spells and items.
A version of coal that is extremely compressed and metallic, anthracite became a favorite of dark wizards and practicers of the black arts.
When dead plant matter decays over millions years, we get this useful energy source.
A light and volcanic rock that is useful in exfoliants, plant substrates, and oddly the purpose of cleaning up magical spills and disasters.
A sedimentary rock that is often composed of the skeletal fragments of marine organisms such as coral, foraminifera, and molluscs.
Like a prism, ethereal opal splits and refracts energies from other sources, bringing them to the surface for examination and direction to other places.
A beautiful metamorphic rock used often in construction of buildings and sculptures, it also finds its way into magic preferred by angels and those studying the air elemental arts.
A prismatic crystal that creates useful vibrations under certain magical circumstances, and is also quite pretty.
A fine iron cog that might go into a clock or steam mechanism of some kind.
This button is made from a lustrous oak wood, and is in good shape.
A mineral used in plaster and fertilizer, gypsum also found its way into air elemental sorcery and potions involving sleep, paralysis and mesmerization.
This pink gemstone has properties of enhancing love and reducing stress.
Heart and blood spells have many uses for the bloodstone, which also is key to various magics relating to vampirism.
Fool's gold, as it's commonly known, also plays a small supplemental role in fire magic.
Mica is formed in layers of crystals, and is useful in various everyday construction purposes but also as an element of earth or wind magic, particularly in summoning elementals.
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.
Harpies rarely give up their claws on purpose, making them a somewhat rarified spell component.
These taste nothing like banana candy! Source: Wild Knoll
It's like a chocolate chip cookie but with that extra ingredient vampires crave.
This egg was laid by an ordinary chicken.
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