D&D 5e Item Compendium
The compendium requires Foundry version 11, but the package can be installed on older versions for the artwork alone.
This module contains three item compendiums:
- Mundane Items
- Adventuring Gear
- Ammunition
- Armour
- Food and Drink
- Gaming Sets
- Instruments
- Mount and Tack
- Starting Equipment
- Tools, Kits, and Artisan Tools
- Trade Goods
- Vehicles
- Weapons
- Magic Items
- Armour
- Clothes
- Jewellery
- Potions, Poisons, Bottles, and Vials
- Spell Components
- Spellcasting Foci
- Stones and Gems
- Misc.
- Treasure and Loot
- Gemstones
- Misc.
All with original, individual, icons by Gwillewyn, and neatly organised in subfolders.
880+ coloured vector images of items from D&D5e.
Vector images are small in file size and infinitely scalable. The same picture can be used at 25x25px and 2500x2500px with no loss of quality. The largest file in the whole pack is 385 KB, while the average is less than 25 KB.
I have somewhat pushed the limits of what can be done with SVG-files to achieve effects and details while still keeping file sizes small and browser compatible.
Screenshots
Artwork Examples
Potion of Longevity
Suspended in this amber liquid are a scorpion's tail, an adder's fang, a dead spider, and a tiny heart that, against all reason, is still beating.
Filesize: 25.5 KB
Content of the Compendiums
- Items from the SRD with full description (mostly copied from the in-game compendium)
- Spell components with information about what spell they are needed for
- Some extra treasure and loot
- Non-SRD items are unfortunately not in the compendiums, but there is plenty of artwork for you do add your own
Content of the Artwork Folders
- Most mundane items from Dungeon Master's Guide (DMG) and Player Handbook (PHB)
- Adventuring Gear
- Ammunition
- Armour
- Food and Drink
- Gaming Sets
- Instruments
- Mounts
- Spellcasting foci
- Tools, Kits, and Artisan Tools
- Trade Good
- Vehicles
- Weapons
- Some Treasure items from DMG and PHB. (Some oddly specific ones have been made more generic. Some I just didn't feel like making.)
- All Magic Potions from DMG
- Various Magic Items
- Spell components from PHB, Tasha's Cauldron of Everything, and Xanathar's Guide to Everything. Nowhere near everything, but I've tried to make those things that are very specific, hard to find, has a gold value, and any items that get consumed. Basically, anything the DM might argue about whether or not you have.
- And anything I just felt like making.
Certain items that I find it unreasonable to literally carry around with you, such as livestock and vehicles, are represented by a deed or receipt to keep in your inventory. Some items come in more than one design for a bit of variety.
Additional items include:
- A multitude of generic bottles and vials with various coloured content
- Unspecific generic gemstones of a variety of colours
- Generic Scrolls and Books
- Items referred to in starting equipment and toolkits that have no specified individual weight or value listed
- Items of (to me) unknown origin that my party has been awarded by out GM in various campaigns
- Things I just felt like making
Artwork is sorted by type in human-readable subfolders.
TODO
- [ ] Specific Books and Scrolls
- [ ] Even more Magic Items
- [ ] Even more Treasure and Loot (especially missing items from SRD)
- [x] More Magic Items
- [x] More Treasure Items
- [x] More Spell Components
- [ ] Cosmetic variations of some items (mainly armour and shields)
- [ ] Requests
Credit
My deepest thanks and respect to the brilliant artists from game-icons.net for creating the icons I have used as source material for most of my images. I love their style and try to keep as much of it as possible in my coloured versions.
game-icons.net distribute their icons under the terms of the Creative Commons 3.0 BY license, and by extension, so do I. Exact credits can be found in my Google Sheets where I tried to keep track of my mess, until it go out of hand.
Examples of Modifications
Most of these icons are colourised versions of items from game-icons.net, some are slightly edited, some are heavily edited, and a few are originals by me trying to harmonise with the aesthetics of other icons.