Resource Chest #59491 (25/25)
This candle is made of white wax, and looks to only have been lit once or twice.
A bone from some mystery canine.
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.
A fine grass screen, useful for catching fish or preventing debris from blowing into your house.
This bowl was hand-carved from a solid piece of oak.
This is a feather from the Cyan Lovebird, also known as the 'Lost Lovebird' due to its somber blue tones.
Made from ground-up Sage Thistle, this is a very smelly, very good spice.
It's like a human ribcage, only smaller.
Gnome bones are curiously tough, and these are no exception.
You wonder where the rest of this very tiny skeleton ended up, leaving behind only the head.
A sturdy clay tile, with a basic pattern on it.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
This is refined salt crystals. Yum!
This powder is a residue leftover from Rainbow Sprites as they frolic in the forest.
If you eat the correct type of Amanita, it's delicious. If you eat the wrong type, it's a trip to the infirmary. Choose wisely! Source: Wild Knoll
A mineral used in plaster and fertilizer, gypsum also found its way into air elemental sorcery and potions involving sleep, paralysis and mesmerization.
Creamy and cold, just how you like it.
Useful in sympathy magic, nickel can be used to make linkages between one magic item or source and another, often over long distances.
Independence and life-force energy work often relies on this reddish orange stone.
There are rumors that gnomes make their homes in these, but who knows. Source: Wild Knoll
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.
This mushroom is in the shape of a perfectly round, stubby button.
Bore worms do extremely unpleasant things to flesh, and should be avoided.
Various slime molds infest the dungeons and dark places of the world. This one is green.
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.