Aside from daily writs, there is a little trick to increasing the amount of gold mats when refining. What you do is refine 2-3 individual stacks of materials at a time, then exit the crafting station menu and then enter it again and repeat. What you are looking for is gold mats dropping from the refining of the 2-3 stacks.
Once you get gold mats from a set (2 gold in the small batch will get you the most), refine everything you have without leaving the menu.
Other players have videos on this method, but do not explain that once you find a good set of gold mats dropping from that small amount of refining, to go ahead and refine all your stacks at once. I figured that part out myself after testing it a few times, and it's much more effective than doing the 2-3 stack method on repeat until you run out of stacks.
I am sure this is a very silly question to people who focus on crafting (which I am not). I have a number of crafted pieces of equipment (Blacksmithing, Jewelerry, Woodworking) that I would like to upgrade to Gold (forgot the name, the highest tier). The prices at guild vendors are absurdly high, like 30k+ EACH (!) and I need like 10 per piece of gear. If there is somethign specific that people do to farm these that would be great to know.
endgamesmug wrote: »I am sure this is a very silly question to people who focus on crafting (which I am not). I have a number of crafted pieces of equipment (Blacksmithing, Jewelerry, Woodworking) that I would like to upgrade to Gold (forgot the name, the highest tier). The prices at guild vendors are absurdly high, like 30k+ EACH (!) and I need like 10 per piece of gear. If there is somethign specific that people do to farm these that would be great to know.
I have plenty of tempering alloy/rosin i can donate you if youre hard up providing youre on pcna 😀
SeaGtGruff wrote: »One thing to beware of-- don't bother trying to improve your gear yourself if you haven't upgraded your passives such that the improvements require the least number of tempering mats. It's okay to improve from white to green, or green to blue, but if you're having to buy the tempering mats and haven't maxed your passives yet, then improving from blue to purple or from purple to gold is going to cost more than it needs to. Of course, if you feel like you can afford it, then go for it! But I assume that if that were the case then you wouldn't have mentioned how much the tempering mats cost.
Anyway, try to get your passives up to where it takes only 8 gold to improve a purple item, or 4 gold to improve purple jewelry. The difference between 10 and 8 might not seem so bad, but that's 2 extra gold mats per item, which could end up being an extra 22 gold mats-- 2 x 7 for your armor, and as much as 2 x 4 for your weapons (assuming the maximum of 2 items per skill bar, such as a 1-handed weapon plus a shield on one bar and two 1-handed weapons on the other bar).