A simple wooden altar serves as a rustic shrine for offerings or rituals, often carved from oak or pine. In remote villages, it's used for minor ceremonies to appease local spirits. Sturdy yet lightweight, it can be portable for traveling priests, holding candles, incense, or sacred relics.
Rough-hewn planks of ancient oak form the altar's broad surface, scarred by knife gouges and stained with dark, crusted patches that flake under touch. Carved vines twist along its edges, their leaves etched deep into the grain, curling toward a shallow basin at the center where rainwater pools in silvery threads. The wood's surface gleams faintly with embedded resins, exhaling a sharp tang of pine and earth.
| # | Name | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Craft Wooden Altar |