In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
I've already mentioned that 2 of my alchemy writs automatically completed based on potions crafted by someone else that I bought. I could see the inventory amount of these potions reduce by 1 when I turned in the writ.In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
Writs won't take items crafted by another player at all. They have to be tagged as crafted by your character. If the potions are the same as ones you have crafted and are in inventory then when they stack they can take on an "identity" label as crafted by you. I think the only crafting writs that take items made by another character on your account is Provisioning (this may no longer be a thing).
In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
Writs won't take items crafted by another player at all. They have to be tagged as crafted by your character. If the potions are the same as ones you have crafted and are in inventory then when they stack they can take on an "identity" label as crafted by you. I think the only crafting writs that take items made by another character on your account is Provisioning (this may no longer be a thing).
In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
Writs won't take items crafted by another player at all. They have to be tagged as crafted by your character. If the potions are the same as ones you have crafted and are in inventory then when they stack they can take on an "identity" label as crafted by you. I think the only crafting writs that take items made by another character on your account is Provisioning (this may no longer be a thing).
Normal writs will take items crafted by another player.
Masterwrits will only take the item crafted by the character that accepted the writ. [Found this out the hard way when I accepted a masterwrit on a character that didn't know that recipe. 2 weeks and 39k later, she learned the recipe and turned in the master writ]
In my case, the writs (on 2 occasions) took a health potion from my inventory that was crafted, but not by me, because I bought someone else's crafted potions. So it seems I have no option but to carefully examine my alchemy writs in future, in case I need to temporarily move my good health potions to the bank while I do the writ.The short answer is no. Nothing in the vanilla game, no addon (that I'm aware of) could do that for you.
It takes/counts them from your existing inventory if that character crafted them. You'd have to craft the potion anyway.
Writs won't take items crafted by another player at all. They have to be tagged as crafted by your character. If the potions are the same as ones you have crafted and are in inventory then when they stack they can take on an "identity" label as crafted by you. I think the only crafting writs that take items made by another character on your account is Provisioning (this may no longer be a thing).
Normal writs will take items crafted by another player.
Masterwrits will only take the item crafted by the character that accepted the writ. [Found this out the hard way when I accepted a masterwrit on a character that didn't know that recipe. 2 weeks and 39k later, she learned the recipe and turned in the master writ]
I can't even have one of my own items crafted by character A on my account be allowed to count for a normal writ with the exception of Provisioning creations. I have, on occasion, crafted say an Iron Sword by accident when I needed to make a Rubedite Sword. I have banked the Iron Sword and gone onto another character that gets the same normal writ, taken the item out of my bank. I have done with after accepting the writ on a that second character (knowing it's getting the writ requiring the iron sword, cuirass, and greaves) along with prior to accepting the writ quest. I have 8 characters doing daily writs. If I can't get gear items to count for a normal writ made by my other characters I can't see how items made by another player actual fulfill that. As I said, I know it works between my characters for Provisioning. I haven't seen it count for Alchemy or Enchanting but I have not ever needed to try for those. Someone above mentioned it works for Alchemy no matter who makes it.
By the way in case anyone is wondering I am a Grand Master Crafter and also get several Master Writs to complete. If you're on PC, using the addon Writ Worthy is quite handy.