Since my previous enchanting room was rather small I recently decided to make a brand new and bigger enchanting room. I’m using a style here which I haven’t used in a long time which uses hardened clay… or I guess it’s now called terracotta and logs, typically spruce and dark oak as they go well with the clay.

On each side of the room from the left to the right I have an anvil and a grindstone respectively, anvil for adding enchantments together and the grindstone for removing them.

The Enchanting table and its bookshelves are inset in the floor which isn’t my original idea, it was inspired by a creator known as Dataless822 who I learned much of my Minecraft knowledge from.

I placed chiseled bookshelves on top to hold written books and book and quills, possibly also enchanted books. Most books though will be stored in the double chest in the middle, it’s placed on its side so it takes up less space.

Also I did use gold blocks on the ceiling for decoration, I have so many from the gold farm so I thought I’d try decorating with them, and I think it turned out very nice.

Also here’s the room from a different angle.

I have a decorative armor stand with my player head displayed on it along with some dyed leather armor and in the right corner I have one of my cats (since the picture has been taken I have aquired another cat and placed it in the other corner).

Here’s what the old area where my enchanting station was now that I moved it. I think it looks pretty nice but admitedly I will likely never use these smokers as I have a fire aspect sword with mending on it to cook my food, I did fit the ender chest there though since I use that quite regularly (I have a lot of junk in my ender chest I have to clean out).

Here is what the room looks like from the outside, on the right side is the door leading to my portal room which I’ve shown in a previous post, and to the left upstairs is my crafting area. Behind me not visible in the picture is a hallway to my other indoor farms which I might show off in a future post when they’re all finished.