This cool mushroom was found growing on a grassy patch that is covered with dead spruce leaves. The patch is covered in shade by the large spruce and it is very wet due to collecting rain.
The cap is smooth and umbonate. Its cap margin is appendiculate. No partial veil observed.
The mushroom is gilled. Its gills are free and narrow. The gills are average in thickness and are close in spacing. The edges of the gills are even.
The stem location is central and the stem is rounded. The bulb from the picture looks fusiform.
I would i.d. this mushroom as Inocybe spp. due to these features. Comparing it with the Mushroom Up! webpage for mushroom identification, it looks most close to Inocybe whitei. It looks similar to another mushroom that I uploaded, but there are a few differences such as cap shape and the like. I believe this may be due to the two mushrooms being of different stages in their life cycles, or that they are closely related species.