Common Magical Items
Telegraph Scrolls. When a message is written into this scroll and the wax seal pressed the message is passed into a Telegraph Station within 4 leagues and transmitted to any scrolls with identical sigils upon their seal. The message will appear upon the receiving scroll in the same ink provided it is within range of a connected station.
The cheapest and most readily available method of magical communication. Sigils can be duplicated and signals intercepted by the stations. Rendering the messages relatively insecure. Most commonly they are seen in the Messenger guilds which will transmit messages on behalf of visitors for a small fee.
Birdsong Scroll. When a message is written into this scroll addressed to a persons true name, and a command spoken, a spectral bird will take the message and deliver it to them in the form of an illusionary copy that fades over a few hours.
Speaking Stones. Enchanted stones, or more commonly wooden tokens, made in pairs split from the same piece originally. While the stones remain within a league of each other, any sound "heard" by one stone can be heard coming from the other stone. They are commonly kept within a soundproof bag when not in use.
Mage Light. A must have for any scholar reading late into the night, these steady lanterns require no light but instead are fueled by magical energies. A lantern will commonly have 1d6+2 charges, each charge allowing the light to last 1 hour. These charges refill at dawn when lit by the sun.
Some mage lights are able to fly, change colors, provide heat or other special effects.
Bells of Silence. A common tool of merchants or those with secrets, a bell of silence commonly looks like a desk bell engraved with magical sigils. When pressed the bell creates a spherical area which sounds cannot pass through. Those outside cannot hear those inside and vice versa.
Heat Transfer Stones. Carved gemstones commonly made from a red and blue gemstone fused. One side of the stone creates heat and the other cold. Often used to cool drinks or rooms.
There is much debate as to why one cannot create a stone of cold, but all attempts only function for a few hours before breaking down and creating heat instead.
Flameheart Stones. These dark stones glow like embers and must be carefully handled. They create heat at all times, like a roaring flame. Most commonly used in blacksmiths kits, rarely used for cooking.