Resource Chest #73881 (24/25)
How much straw goes into a bundle varies from country to country. This bundle feels just right to you.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
This fork has 4 tines, and would be perfect for skewering food or perhaps being wielded by a very tiny demon.
This sturdy corkscrew is great for screwing and unscrewing corks.
This soap smells musky and produces a fine lather.
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
As if worms couldn't get any more gross, this one is missing all of the pigment in its flesh.
This plain banner is tinted yellow with sagebrush-based dye.
You really can't beat an iron pail when it comes to hauling water from a well.
The plumber who crafted this tubing is either brilliant or insane.
This powder is a residue leftover from Rainbow Sprites as they frolic in the forest.
This is a green sagestone, valued highly by Elders and others involved in humanity-based magic.
When qualities of fluidity or cosmic mystery are needed for a spell, mercury is often relied upon.
One of the most legendary of semi-precious stones, turquoise is often incorporated into protective amulets.
An extremely common stone, it mainly is used in everyday purposes but finds its way into the occasional sand or desert magic component.
A sedimentary rock that is often composed of the skeletal fragments of marine organisms such as coral, foraminifera, and molluscs.
A light and volcanic rock that is useful in exfoliants, plant substrates, and oddly the purpose of cleaning up magical spills and disasters.
Clear quartz is used primarily as an amplifier of energy, hence being combined often with other stones or magic sources.
Everyone's favorite fall food! Source: Wild Knoll
When dead plant matter decays over millions years, we get this useful energy source.
This is great as a spice, and as an ingredient in joke sneeze powder.
This orb glows and swirls with a mesmerizing azure light.
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This pear has a strange purple hue and a fragrant smell. Source: Wild Knoll