Wood can be processed at the carpentry table.
Cut from a tree.
Cut, often for fuel.
A board, often used for construction.
Cut from a tree; many simple but useful purposes.
Ores can be smelted into ingots at a forge. Ingots are a material for crafting at the anvil.
Used to create copper ingots.
Can be turned into pots, trim, tools, etc.
Used to create iron ingots.
Can be used to make pots, pans, utensils, equipment and for construction.
Used to create silver ingots.
Often used to create jewelry, adorn equipment, and currency.
Used to create gold ingots.
Largely purposed as currency, but can also be used to adorn objects.
Used to create tin ingots.
Transformed into pewter for utensils and crockery.
Used to make steel ingots.
Made from pig iron, most popular for the creation of equipment.
These objects can be found in nature and have uses spread across multiple crafts.
From processing the carcass of a deer buck at the tanning rack.
From processing the carcass of a elk bull at the tanning rack.
Often found on dead trees and used to create a skep.
Used to house a bee colony in order to produce honeycomb.
Can be split into wax and honey.
Material to create and fuel candles.
From processing animals at the tanning rack.
Most often used for fertilizer, crafted from bones.
Bucket filled with water for multiple uses.
Wort collected from the mash tun for brewing in the kogelpot.
Could be lucky.
Can be used in cooking and, dare I say, witchcraft?
Great for broth while cooking pottage.
Barley, Oats, Wheat, Rye, all of which can be used to create bread or wort.
From processing the carcass of a cattle bull at the tanning rack.
From processing the carcass of an adult boar at the tanning rack.
Used in construction.
Textiles are crafted from foraged resources, like flax, or harvest resources like wool.
Used to create small items of clothing.
Used to create larger items of clothing as well as tents, flags, etc.
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