Oil of Dawn --- Quality 2

Oil of Dawn glows like a captured sunrise in a slender amber vial, the liquid inside moving with a patient, glass-smooth gravity that refuses to be rushed. The oil sits heavy in the bottle, a syrupy gold that clings to the sides as if the first light of day itself were reluctant to let go. Tilt it and a thread of light crawls along the inner surface, a pale halo that shivers when you breathe near it. The texture feels almost velvet on the fingertip—thick but never sticky, rich with a sweetness that hints at citrus rind, resin smoke, and a breath of salt from distant seas. When uncorked, it exhales a scent of dawn: soft lilac, warm amber, and something like rain-washed linen, all of it soft enough to be mistaken for perfume until you remember that it wakes things up. Lore says it was born from dawnflowers, blossoms that open only when the sky finally blinks away night, pressed and distilled by lantern-bearers who walk the city’s edge at first light. The kept secret was not merely how to coax oil from petals but how to bind that early-fire into a liquid that would carry a waking breath wherever it traveled. People tell stories of vessels found in shipwrecks that still held a spark of sunrise, of old medallions that gleam brighter after a drop of this oil has touched them. In the telling, Oil of Dawn becomes more than a tool; it is a memory of the world turning, a reminder that every dawn earned its own shade of gold. In the field, the oil becomes part of the fabric of daily life. Travelers anoint their blades to catch the faint edge of a hidden rune-circuit etched on steel from a previous age, and the edge catches the sun for a moment longer than the eye expects. Carters smear a line along the seam of a saddle or a boot sole to keep leather from stiffening in the desert wind, the gloss lending a fraction of grip to a slippery step. Alchemists dilute it into tinctures that accelerate the healing of small cuts, while healers whisper that it can temper fever’s edge when dropped into a cup of tea or broth. It is also a curious lantern fuel: a single drop on a wick raises the flame with a pale incandescence that reveals soft-edged shadows and the faint echo of footprints that might otherwise be missed in dawn’s glare. Prices move like tides, depending on need and rumor, and that is where Saddlebag Exchange enters the tale without shouting its presence. I watched a carrier barter for a bottle with a handful of coins and a rusted compass, the vendor’s eyes narrowing at the mention of a festival in the harbor that would send every lantern to burn brighter than usual. The exchange, with its rough-hewn boards and brass tags, becomes the story’s heartbeat: a marketplace that threads distant dawns to nearby doorsteps, where one bottle can change how a night ends and a new day begins. Oil of Dawn is not merely a reagent; it is a compact between light and life, carried from vendor to traveler, from myth to makings, until the world itself tilts toward morning.

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Minimum Price

187.86

Historic Price

244.3

Current Market Value

793,332

Historic Market Value

1,031,678

Sales Per Day

4,223

Percent Change

-23.1%

Current Quantity

2,143

Average Quantity

1,367

Avg v Current Quantity

156.77%

Oil of Dawn --- Quality 2 : Auctionhouse Listings

Price
Quantity
49,997.045
450.8810
450.8517
450.525
448.45103
448.43198
447.425
422.055
420.054
420.0420
42020
419.985
419.975
419.9510
419.925
4193
415.997
410.9914
400.995
400.9857
400.9716
313.1935
312.197
311.9510
305.9415
3005
256.5224
250.925
200.914
200.97
200.8950
200.8810
200.8726
2005
19833
19710
194.510
194.49114
194.445
194.425
193.4210
19390
190180
189.9910
189.9710
189.9515
189.9410
189.9255
189.9125
189.915
189.8933
189.88105
189.85193
189.0125
189105
188122
187.932
187.8982
187.8853
187.8710
187.8644