Torpack Concrete

Torpakh (torpack) or Ikharonian concrete was pretty much as we know pozzolana concrete. Could be embedded with Ikhanic vines to increase toughness.

Valcamic steel

Valcamic steel - hardest of them all and unusually heavy, but also very brittle; not at all suitable for making blades. It was mostly used for making tools, cutters, stonework bits, armor-piercing bolt heads, etc. It was very rare and even harder to process into products, but tools made out of it allowed highly efficient steelworking in form of chisels, files, saws, etc. and was also used as mining pick and drill heads to cut through granite.

Name hailed from Strömic word välkam, meaning hard. Virtually all of this steel originated from the depths of the Grand Mountains, a monopoly controlled by the Vaskites.

Brimmboric steel

Brimmboric steel - another meteoritic alloy only occurring in two known locations in the Iron Mountains: Grimrock and Ramrock mines, and processing it was a secret of the Iron Guild.

Resistant to rust, it retained high toughness when hardened; could be tempered harder than common steels. Was used to craft high grade equipment, but curiously also used to make money, krammers, whose authenticity was confirmed with two files, an ordinary one that did not bite, and another one made from yet another alloy, valcamic steel.

The Condarian Seafarers' Empire was built with this steel, and it remained as one of the best materials for making excellent armor and weapons.

Duran - the Sarcophagus Steel

Duran - is a rare meteoritic alloy-steel produced only in the Hidden Valley of Harachim. It is famed for its air-hardening behavior, resistance to rust, excellent hot strength, and its naturally forming wavy oxidation patterns, which shimmer in bands of blue, gray, violet, and black when properly polished.

The metal got its name from the Silannic root durchanat, meaning casket, sarcophagus. The name came from the need to rest half-worked duran billets in sealed, coal-filled boxes during forging, because the metal is air-hardening. Without these annealing rests, the steel was prone to crumbling, cracking, or splitting under the hammer. The Hagachim method required three overnight rests before a raw lump could be reliably drawn into a blade.

Duran made superior blades, armor, and tools for hot work. Its special importance came later, when the Hagat Belait, the Durachim's Lightning Warriors, discovered its unique suitability for thunderblades. Where ordinary steels noodled under thunderfire's heat, duran retained its form to golden-white heat, and being air-hardening, recovered its hardness after glowing hot.

Windsilk Ikhanic Vines

Windsilk or Ikhanic vine - long vines growing in Ikharonia. The processed fibers were incredibly strong. Was used to make common ropes, bowstrings, and armor. During later eras, tech was developed to allow it to be used for crafting skyship canvases, reducing their cost, albeit being heavier than whitesteel.

Anduran Spider Silk

Whitesteel or Anduran (andal duran - white armor) or spider silk. Existed only in a few known colonies of lapdog-sized spiders, its harvesting was difficult, as was its processing, but it was one of the lightest and strongest materials known. It was used in a few historical occasions to enhance armor as common blades had difficulties piercing even a single layer, however the difficulty of harvesting it made it ludicrously expensive and rare, so it never saw real practical use - not before it did.

Its lightness and resistance to prolonged heating made it ideal for the most unexpected use, skyship canvases and sails. Nobody but Professor Gilgavangel was mad enough to even think about it, and no one but Vice Merial Arhim was commanding enough resources to harvest and process it. The Yonian States' civil war drove them to farm these creatures to mass produce anduran for the arms race. Windsilk substituted it later where possible, but it degraded under heat and had to be replaced eventually.

Papers

Limpur or wood pulp paper - originally invented by the Ikharonians, it eventually replaced the Palpurian cartoph, a straw papyrus. It was, of course, weaponized too, by making armor.

Folded blocks were sewn together and treated in various ways, including dunking in tar to make them water resistant. This allowed making armor that was lighter, warm in cold yet cool in hot, and offered better protection especially from piercing attacks like arrows.

Above all, it was much cheaper to manufacture in mass quantities, allowing the Yonians to equip their army with scarce metal resources during the Revolutionary War. The armor design was perfected during Pax Yanakhon, and became the standard issue for Yonian legionaries. Due to paper's properties, it could even stop bolts of thunderfire that burn readily through steel.

Woods

Javanawood was tough, suitable for bows and items needing strength, but too rare and expensive for building larger things. The trees were short but thick, with heavy ball-shaped leafy top full of branches.

Ironbanck Oak or Ironwood was abundant in Rammornia and the Continentals, but somewhat rare in Ionia. It was very heavy and dense, but also very strong and resistant to rotting, and hence was favored especially for shipbuilding

Sharpawood was native to Ikharonia and Teleng region. It was pale, and one of the lightest woods, but very tough and strong, making it suitable for many applications. Ikharonians crafted most everything from it, from bows to canal boats, and it had a grain structure that aged well, making it a good contrast wood for darker woods in furniture crafting. The most famous use of sharpawood were the hulls and structures of skyships.

Yaliwood was a lowland wood requiring rich soil and plenty of water, but was relatively soft and unsuitable for any demanding applications. It grew shallow, reminding jagolinewood, but its bark was pale and its leaves were its most distinctive feature: they grew in shades of purple, and could be used to produce purple dyes in all shades with a proper extraction method. Its flowers had white leaves, and its golden berries were used as food.

Jagolinewood was abundant in the coastal regions and on Jalipan islands. Mostly known of the jagolines it produced, the wood itself was used for crafting furniture and small items, including staffs.

Kibrat Crookwood was, unlike the name suggests, commonly perfectly straight, small tree, with crooked branches at the top reminding its roots. These trees survived in the driest of wastes and were abundant in the Southern regions. Harachimians used them to craft battlestaffs, and their dried and ground roots were used as spice.

Treasurewood or Dalatolk was a rare type of tree native to Harachim Valley. It was the only known host for the treasurebread fungi. It grew exceedingly slowly and could take a century to reach full height; its trunk reminded a huge stack of gnarled, twisted ropes, and its top was sparse basket of branches, its leaves almost round. Harachimians cherished these trees as the most valuable thing in their realm, and they were never known to be used for building anything.

Caporic wood was dark, dense wood, most often used in furniture making. It paired well with pale sharpawood.

Arniwood was native to Pelonnia. It was close to fir, but harder, and above all, abundant beyond measure, for its growth covered most of the continent.

Untowood or Ektohong or The Millennium Tree was a very unique type of wood growing only in the Lonely Valley of Ikharonia. It took thousands of years to reach full size. Single woods could span as far as a mile away from the mother trunk, both above and below ground. Its wood was very dense, hard, and dark, and the mother trunks could reach three hundred feet in both diameter and height. The petrified heartwood, or the essence of Ektohong had a very special role in the old Ikharonic culture, and though it was seldom accessible, a single dead tree's essence could be enough for entire civilization for many generations.