Stonehand Axes and Forge
Est. 2025 • Dwarf Fighter
Stonehand Axes and Forge
The shop sits half carved into bedrock beneath a cluster of old oaks. Iron chains hang from the rafters holding anvils and drying axes. The air smells of hot me...
Shopkeeper
Borin Stonehand, a Dwarf Fighter (Lvl 4)
Keeper's Species
Dwarf
Shop Inventory
(15)A stout, well-balanced handaxe forged for both melee and throwing. Reliable, simple, and easy to replace.
A standard battleaxe: broad blade on a solid haft. Common among militia and sells well.
A heavy greataxe with a wickedly curved head. Favored by warriors who trade speed for damage.
A small single-handed axe honed and weighted so it flies true when thrown.
An orc double axe: brutal, heavy, and built for a two-handed weaving fighting style.
A dwarven waraxe: ornate head and stout haft, carved with clan runes. Heavy and reliable.
A handaxe forged to masterwork standards. The head is perfectly balanced and the edge holds longer.
Borin's Balanced Handaxe - a signature piece with a hand-fitted oak haft and a precisely counterweighted head. Not magical but tuned to a fine edge.
A matched set of five small throwing axes, hafts bound with boiled leather for grip.
A coarse whetstone kept oiled in the smith's workshop. Regular use preserves an edge and prevents chipping.
A sturdy oak haft carved to accept most common axe heads; ferrule included for secure binding.
Padded leather gauntlets that protect the hands when forging and offer decent grip handling weapons.
A 1-pint flask of axe oil. Good for preserving metal and wood exposed to weather and salt.
A common lesser healing potion kept behind the counter for emergencies.
Sharpening and re-tempering service. Borin will tune an existing axe, resettle a loose head, and re-edge the blade.
Borin Stonehand
Shop Atmosphere
“The shop sits half carved into bedrock beneath a cluster of old oaks. Iron chains hang from the rafters holding anvils and drying axes. The air smells of hot metal and pine smoke. Borin hangs a small whetstone above the door; locals touch it for luck. He greets customers with a raspy chuckle and a tap of his hammer on the anvil to measure a visitor's intent. He will refuse to sell double weapons to anyone he deems reckless. He writes a tiny rune mark on every haft he services, then signs the receipt by striking the mark once with his hammer.”
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