Cthulhu Avatar Series :: Lovecraft meets Grimshaw by Oliver Wetter

⁂

No title available

titsay

roma★
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
NASA
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

No title available

if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell
Acquired Stardust
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
No title available
sheepfilms

Love Begins

Kaledo Art
occasionally subtle
Sweet Seals For You, Always
YOU ARE THE REASON

Discoholic 🪩
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United States

seen from Azerbaijan

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Singapore

seen from Germany
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
@braydon-la
Cthulhu Avatar Series :: Lovecraft meets Grimshaw by Oliver Wetter
10:30 me: let’s do a quick squid sketch 11:30 me: …what just happened
18th century embroidery.
vintage headers, dividers, and other images for your digital grimoire/book of shadows
i've compiled several images i've been using for my digital book of shadows, and thought i'd share some of my favorites!
A collection of free-use texts on witchcraft, magic, and related topics. Shared with Dropbox
Hello, witches! Since I’m always harping on about learning your history and checking your sources, I thought I’d help folks get a head start by compiling some source material.
To that end, I’ve started a Dropbox folder with a stash of historical texts on witchcraft, magic, and related topics. Nearly everything I’ve managed to find so far is public domain (thank you Project Gutenberg), with the exception of a very thorough herbal grimoire I found online some years ago and a book of witchcraft from the 1970s that appears to be out of print.
I will be continuing in this vein with future texts that I find. Everything will be public domain or cited to the source that it came from, in PDF format. I will NOT be including PDFs of any book currently in circulation with a copyright linked to a living author or estate. The point of this folder is that everything in it should be free for sharing and open use as research materials.
Below is the initial list of titles. I tried to include as many as I could find, with a focus on some oft-cited classics. I will be adding new texts as I find them.
A Collection of Rare and Curious Tracts on Witchcraft and the Second Sight, by David Webster (1820)
A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 1718, by Wallace Notestein (1909)
British Goblins, Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions, by Wirt Sikes (1880)
Curiosities of Superstition, by W. H. Davenport Adams (1882)
Daemonologie, by King James I/VI (1597)
Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, Edited and Selected by W. B. Yeats (1888)
Irish Witchcraft and Demonology, by St. John Drelincourt Seymour (1913)
La Sorcière, or The Witch of the Middle Ages, by Jules Michelet (1863)
Lives of the Necromancers, by William Godwin (1834)
Magic and Fetishism, by Alfred C. Haddon (1906)
Magic and Witchcraft, by Anonymous (1852)
Modern Magic, by M. Schele de Vere (1873)
Plant Lore, Legends, and Lyrics, by Richard Folkard (1884)
Practical Psychomancy and Crystal Gazing, by William Walker Atkinson (1908)
The Devil in Britain and America, by John Ashton (1896)
The Discoverie of Witchcraft, by Reginald Scot (1594, 1886 reprint)
The Extremely Large Herbal Grimoire (date unknown, internet publication)
The Golden Bough : A Study of Magic and Religion, by Sir James George Frazer (1890)
The Illustrated Key to the Tarot, by L.W. de Laurence (1918)
The Magic of the Horse-shoe, by Robert Means Lawrence (1898)
The Mysteries of All Nations, by James Grant (1880)
The Mystery and Romance of Alchemy and Pharmacy, by Charles John Samuel Thompson (1897)
The Superstitions of Witchcraft, by Howard Williams (1865)
The Witchcraft Delusion in Colonial Connecticut by John M. Taylor (1908)
The Wonders of the Invisible World, by Cotton Mather and A Farther Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches, by Increase Mather (1693, 1862 reprint)
Witch Stories, by E. Lynn (Elizabeth Lynn) Linton (1861)
Witch, Warlock, And Magician, by W. H. Davenport Adams (1889)
Witchcraft & Second Sight in the Highlands & Islands of Scotland, by John Gregorson Campbell (1902)
Witches’ Potions & Spells, ed. by Kathryn Paulsen (1971)
Disclaimer: Please keep in mind that these texts are (with few exceptions) more than a century old, and may contain depictions, references, or language that are outdated and inappropriate. The point of including these documents is to provide access to historical texts for research and reference. Inclusion in the collection does not equal unconditional agreement with or wholesale approval of the contents.
Take everything with a grain of salt and remember to do your due diligence!
Happy Witching! -Bree
Additional texts added 12/31/20:
A Compleat History of Magick, Sorcery, and Witchcraft, by Anonymous (1715)
A True and Faithful Relation of What Passed for Many Yeers Between Dr. John Dee and some Spirits, by John Dee (1659)
Crystal Gazing, by Northcote W. Thomas
Malleus Maleficarum, or Hammer of the Witches, trans. Montague Summers (1486, 1928 translation)
Occult Science in Medicine, by Franz Hartmann (1893)
The Book of Ceremonial Magic, by A.E. Waite (1913)
The Complete Herbal, by Nicholas Culpeper (1652, 1850 reprint)
The Devils of Loudun, by Edmund Goldsmid (1887)
The History of Witchcraft and Demonology, by Montague Summers (1926)
The Old English Herbals, by Eleanour Sinclair Rohde (1922)
Many of these were retrieved from Global Grey Ebooks, which I suggest visiting for more information.
Additional texts added 01/20/2021:
Devil-Worship in France, by A.E. Waite (1896)
Magic and Husbandry: The Folk-Lore of Agriculture, by Lewis Dayton Burdick (1905)
Norse Stories Retold from the Eddas, by Hamilton Wright Mabie (1902)
The Book of Black Magic, by A.E. Waite (1910)
The Book of Were-Wolves, by Sabine Baring-Gould (1865)
The Encyclopaedia of Gardening, by T.W. Sanders (1822)
The Folk-Lore of Plants, by T.F. Thiselton-Dyer (1889, facsimile copy)
The Greater Key of Solomon, Vol. I & II, trans. S. Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1999 from the 1916 deLaurence edition)
The Handbook of Palmistry, by Rosa Baughan (1885, facsimile from the Bodleian Library)
The Prose Edda, intro and notes by Rasmus B. Anderson (1897)
The Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, Books 1-3, trans. S. Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1998 from the 1900 Watkins edition)
The Vampire, His Kith and Kin, by Montague Summers (1928)
I’m always looking for more titles. Stay tuned for periodic updates!
Additional texts added 01/31/2021:
A Manual of Cartomancy and Occult Divination, by Grand Orient (1909, facsimile)
A Manual of Occultism, by Sepharial (1914)
An Encyclopaedia of Occultism, by Lewis Spence (1920)
Demonology And Devil-Lore, Volumes 1 & 2, by Moncure Daniel Conway (1879)
Demons and Tongues, by Alma White (1910)
Fortunes and Dreams, by Astra Cielo (1917)
General Book of the Tarot, by A.E. Thierens (1930)
Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft, by Sir Walter Scott (1884)
Magic and Religion, by Andrew Lang (1901)
Magic and Mystery, A Popular History, by Alfred Thompson (1894)
Magic, Black and White, Charms and Counter Charms, by T. Witton Davies (1910)
Numbers, Their Occult Powers and Mystical Virtues, by William Wynn Westcott (1911)
Occultism and Common Sense, by Beckles Wilson (1908)
Practical Astrology, by Edgar De Valcourt-Vermont (1901, facsimile from The Library of Brigham Young University)
Psychic Self-Defense, by Dion Fortune (1930)
Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, by John Gregorson Campbell (1900)
Telling Fortunes by Tea Leaves, by Cicely Kent (1922)
The Black Pullet, by Anonymous (18th Century)
The Curious Lore of Precious Stones, By George Frederick Kunz (1913)
The Golden Wheel Dream-book and Fortune-Teller, by Felix Fontaine (1862)
The History of Magic, by Eliphas Levi, trans. by A.E. Waite (1922)
The Lesser Key of Solomon, trans. by S. L. McGregor Matthews (1904)
The Leyden Papyrus, trans. by F.L. Griffith and Herbert Thompson (1904)
The Mysteries of Astrology and the Wonders of Magic, by Charles W. Roback (1854, facsimile)
The Place of Magic in the Intellectual History of Europe, by Lynn Thorndike (1905, facsimile)
The Secret Book of the Black Arts, by Unknown (1878, facsimile)
The Symbolism of the Tarot, trans. by P.D. Ouspensky (1913)
The Witches’ Dream Book and Fortune Teller, by A.H. Noe (1885)
The Witches’ Pharmacopoeia, by Robert Fletcher (1896)
Witchcraft and Superstitious Record in the South-Western District of Scotland, by J. Maxwell Wood (1911)
I’m very pleased to include The Lesser Key of Solomon and The Black Pullet in this latest update. I’ve been mining the depths of Project Gutenberg and Global Grey Ebooks, and today I hit paydirt. I’ll keep digging, so stay tuned for more updates.
Enjoy!
Additional texts added 05/03/2021:
Aradia Or the Gospel of the Witches, by Charles G. Leland (1899) [Please note that this title has been updated since publication and newer editions are available in print.]
Clairvoyance and Occult Powers, by William Walker Atkinson (1914)
Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, by Thomas Crofton Croker (1827)
Historic Ghosts and Ghost Hunters, by H. Addington Bruce (1909)
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, by Charles MacKay (1841)
Practical Occultism, by J.J. Morse (1888)
Signs, Omens and Superstitions, by Astra Cielo (1918)
The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries, by W.Y. Evans-Wentz (1911)
The Fairy Mythology, by Thomas Keightley (1870)
The Gardnerian Book of Shadows, by Gerald B. Gardner (1949-1961)
The Human Aura, by William Walker Atkinson (1912)
The Origins of Popular Superstitions and Customs, by T. Sharper Knowlson (1910)
The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies, by Robert Kirk (written 1691, pub. in print 1893)
If you can, please donate to Global Grey Ebooks to thank the archivist for all their hard work!
Additional texts added 1/20/2022:
Astrology and Religion Among the Greeks and Romans, by Franz Cumont (1912)
Christian Mysticism, by William Ralph Inge (1899)
Cultus Arborum: A Description of Phallic Tree Worship, by Anonymous (poss. Hargave Jennings, 1890)
Gleanings of a Mystic, by Max Heindell (1922)
Myths of the Norsemen, by H.A. Grueber (1909)
Pagan Regeneration: A Study of Mystery Initiations in the Graeco-Roman World, by Harold R. Willoughby (1929)
Salem Witchcraft and Cotton Mather, by Charles W. Upham (1869)
Telepathy, or The Science of Thought Transference, by J.C.F. Grumbine (1910)
The Book of Forbidden Knowledge, by Unknown Author (1910)
The Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries, by Thomas Taylor (1891)
The Hermetic Museum, by Arthur Edward Waite (1893 translation)
The Magic of the Middle Ages, by Viktor Rydberg (1865)
The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism, by Franz Cumont (1911)
The Secret Teachings of All Ages, by Manly P. Hall (1928)
West Irish Folk-Tales and Romances, by William Larminie (1893)
Witch, Warlock, and Magician, by W.H. Davenport Adams (1889)
Please read the disclaimer on the original post. If you can, please donate to Global Grey Ebooks to thank the archivist for all their hard work!
"We don't talk about Bruno, no, no, no!" 🙅♀️
Detail: The Fallen Angel, 2007, by Arantzazu Martinez | If you are sensitive to the majestic beauty and delicacy of this painting, don’t go searching for his head. Just enjoy the little things about life.
Okay, it's nowhere near perfect, but I finally finished it.
BEHOLD. THE NIGHT VALE TAROT GUIDE BOOK.
WTNV Tarot Book-compressed-medium.pdf
It's kinda a big file but its worth it. *chef's kiss*
Art belongs to @bonesnail
Rainwater
Rain from a lightening storm
this has the greatest energy
used in a bath to re-energize your being and aid in a ritual of clearing and cleansing your energies of negativity by soaking in it
used to clear and cleanse an object or area
store in a white glass bottle
Rain from thunderstorms, tornadoes or hurricanes
Used to empower spells for moving things forward such as letting go of the past and moving forward in life
used to help move a project forward and get beyond current blocks in life
used to change a pattern or habit you don’t like
store in a blue glass bottle
Sun and Rain
Used to balance energies when feeling weighed down
helps gather your thoughts when they are flighty and scattered
store in a dark green bottle
Hail storm
collect in a metal bowl but dont let it sit in the bowl for more than 6 hours
allow the hail to melt before bottling it
store in a black or dark brown bottle
used to dispel psychic attacks or negative energies
best used for black magic to get rid of your enemies or negative forces that stand in your way
Spring Rain
used to empower new ventures such as new relationships, new business ventures, a new job
rain collected on the spring equinox or the first rain after the spring equinox is good for empowering spells for relationships
stored in a light green bottle
Summer Rain
used to encourage growth whether it be personal, spiritual growth or growth of a business venture or relationship
used to break bad habits
great to water indoor plants
rain collected on mid-summers eve and day is especially mystical
store in a sky blue bottle
Fall Rain
used for giving thanks and showing gratitude for the abundance the year has given you
store in an orange or fall colored bottle
Winter Rain
can be used for blessing a person, relationship, family or object
can be used to bless an event such as a birth, wedding or new business venture
to be able to survive the hardships of winter one is able to survive the hardships of life
Full Moon Rain
Used to honor the Goddess
a small glass can be added to a cleansing bath
add a couple of drops to your bath before an important event or ritual
used for a blessing during a full moon ritual
used for blessing a child or pet
rain collected during the full moon according to that season will have the energies of that moon according to month and season
clean altar spaces and other things by putting an ounce of rain water into your cleaning products
also very good for divination
Waning Moon Rain
good for getting rid of things, banishings, and purging negative energies
used like a banishing oil
also can be added to your bath for relaxation, clarity or promoting self love
use to prepare for lunar rituals
anoint your money with it to increase your wealth
anoint yourself to increase your psychic awareness
New Moon Rain
good for workings in which something needs to be brought in
used when starting a new project
Waxing Moon Rain
used to bring in good energies and blessing
used at the start of a new project or a new beginning
Rain collected from trees or roses will have different energies depending on the type of tree or color of the rose you collect it from
Use 1 cup of rain water to 1 tub size of water
For rituals use 1oz of rain water in a glass bowl or cauldron, to add effects to the water pour over crystals energized with your intent
For a spell place all your spell items in your bowl or cauldron and add 1tablespoon of rainwater
For cleansing or anointing ritual take 1/2oz of rainwater into a glass bowl and as you recite your incantation dip your fingers or wand/athame into the water then mark your physical body, the mark can be any spiritual symbol that has meaning to you
To anoint a tool, pout 1oz of rainwater onto the tool as you state your incantation to empower the tool for its intended purpose.
@autumnwitchesx i hope this helps you some!!!
also the bottles you store in dont have to be a specific color unless you want them to be, im all for using what you have first and foremost
Herbs and Others for Curses, Hexes, and Jinxes
coffee/dark cocoa - causes target bitterness
Chili Powder ~ for discord, bane, curses
Mustard Seed ~ the seed of strife and discord. Leave it at one’s doorstep, particularly black mustard seed. This seed sprinkled around the trunk of a fruit tree on the first evening of the full moon will cause the tree to bear no fruit.
Onion ~ can cause strife in an enemy’s life.
Poppy Seed ~ Causes couples to argue.
Sumac ~ for curses, hexing, bringing bad luck
Grapefruit - causes enemy sour start, but leaves a good ending
peppers - great for those spreading lies and talking general shit. The hotter the pepper (vegetable or spice) the more intense the curse.
salt - to repel someone from reentering your life and home.
vinegar - to make someone eat their words or to stop running their mouth.
basil - for someone who owes you money.
mint - to cool someone’s anger or hatred toward you.
potato - for someone standing in your way. carve someone’s name into the potato (or initials) and then cut it up/cook as normal.
having a wooden spoon you use ONLY for cursing magic within the kitchen. You can inscribe/woodburn sigils and words to your liking. This is VERY useful. Just be sure you ONLY use it for cursing and hexing for foods.
lemon/lime/any tart fruit - to stop someone’s slander, lies, and general cursing
Black pepper or ginger - add in baking mix if you want to cause the target anger.
Grated lemon - add in baking mix if you want to cause the target to be sour to others.
Black icing - colour correspondence for hexes and curses.
Stirring counter clockwise is good for undoing the actions or intent of the person you are cursing.
Stirring clockwise is for sealing/bringing to fruition.
You can do cursing/hexing in your kitchen. Write someone’s name on a slip of paper (or take their picture) and put it in your pot and add vinegar, oils, needles/nails and herbs on the stove, intending your hex on that person. Toss out like (preferably off your property) when done.
Most kitchen witches, myself included, keep glass jars and bottles around. You can take a piece of paper with the person’s name or their picture, put in a jar with oil and herbs and shake it up each time you focus your hexing intent. Obviously the more shaking you do the more intense. Do till you feel the hexing is done and they’ve stopped their shit.
When cursing/hexing food (or doing the pot trick like I mentioned above), you can also say (from Dorothy Morrison’s Utterly Wicked, pg. 66):
The magic that’s within this dish is meant for (name of target), as is my wish.
On others who may hear its call it shall not have any effect at all.
Pure delight is all they’ll feel as they fill their plates and eat this meal.
But (name of target) it will hit magically
As I will, so mote it be.
@breelandwalker and @diary-of-demosthenes
Cat Whiskers in Witchcraft
Cat whiskers are very magical! They can be used in any spell to give it a huge magical boost! They are also very good for good luck, and protection.
A cat uses it’s whiskers to keep itself safe- they let the cat know if it can fit into a tight place or not. Therefore, cat whiskers an be used for protection. Especially when traveling, in this or the Otherworlds- cats are said to walk between the worlds, after all. Since they are quite thin and hard to spot when not on the cat- and therefore difficult to find- they also have the properties of good luck and fortune.
You can also burn a whisker to boost manifestation. There is even an old wives’ tale that says if you burn a cat whisker and make a wish, that your wish will come true!
Keep a few in your car for protection and to avoid accidents. (I put mine in a little baggie or in a sealed labeled envelope in the glove compartment.)
Some other interesting magical uses based on what a cats whisker might mean to you: Using them to make sure that something fits, gets past obstacles, or for an extra pit of perception (since this is the use of a cat’s whiskers). If it’s a black whisker, it could be used for something you want to remain a secret. Putting good luck and perception thoughts together, use them to help find lost items.
Remember, never cut a cat’s whiskers! It can be very confusing and stressful for the cat because it’s a part of their natural senses. Wait until they’re shed naturally :) I find it helpful to search in my cat’s favorite spots, or just keep an eye out for them before vacuuming. A bright flashlight can help you find them easier!
Don’t have a cat? There are witchy kitty owners who sell their cats’ naturally shed whiskers on Etsy!
Crown's "Get the Fuck Out!" spell - Living People Version
So you’ve some nasty creepers hanging around. Maybe it’s a roommate that just needs to get the fuck out or maybe it’s a visitor getting all up in your shit. What do you do?
Get pissed. No, really. Get fucking angry. This sort of behavior isn’t acceptable. Think of alllllllllll the reasons you want them gone. Channel your inner Hulk if you have to.
Now that you’re good and angry, get yourself a jar. Pickle jars are awesome for this but whatever you have laying around it good. You might want to go with a plastic jar or bottle, in case you drop it later.
Shoot some angry glares at your target if they’re around and go collect your ingredients. What you put in this depends on you. I’m an asshole so I dump broken glass, bits of metal (probably a cut up soda can my target drank from), all the pepper I can find, wasabi, nails, screws, pins, thorns, steel wool, that scratchy face cloth they always bitch about, lemon juice, skanky beer, any food their allergic too, dust from their room, and oh look, one of their socks managed to get into my jar too. How sad. Pick whatever works for you.
Make a poppet. For this sort of thing I don’t usually go with a cloth poppet. I’ll use one of paper instead. Sometimes I’ll stuff it, sometimes it’ll be just a piece of paper cut into the target’s shape. Now draw. I don’t care if you’re stick-figure challenged. Dig out those crayons under your bed and color. Accessorize them as much as possible. Another person should be able to look at that piece of paper and know who it is from context even if it doesn’t look like the target.
Now stick the poppet and all your ingredients in the jar. Top it off with water from an outside source. I’m totes serious on this. I’m a fucking lazy as hell hermit and even my ass walks down to the swamp to collect some water. The reason it needs to be from outside is because you want them to leave. Ahhh, that makes sense. Now go, get walking.
Everything inside all nice and shit? Seal that fucker up. Don’t use wax. Use duct tape if you have to but you’ll need to open it later. Now shake the fuck out of it. I mean, really go to town on this thing. Watch to make sure you don’t drop it or punch yourself in the face. Your arms should hurt from shaking this. I find doing this in front of the roommate garners interesting results.
Happy? Tired now? Good. It probably looks and smells like shit. Perfect. Get a picture of your target. If you can’t get a picture (really? Facebook can’t help you here?) then make another awesome-except-it’s-your-asshole-target poppet. Lightly coat the picture with the liquid from inside the jar.
Now take the picture and send it the fuck away. Leave it on a bus, put it in the mail, place it on a boat, “forget” it on a train, “misplace” it on a plane, or abandon it at some faraway crossroad. You can also set up a witch mailing circle. (Witches sending shit through the mail to one another. Using this, carefully mark an envelope holding the poppet and ask the other witch to dispose of it for you. I knew someone that dropped a poppet into a mulcher for a curse. You don’t need something quite so excessive here.)
Shake that fucking jar. Keep shaking it. Do that at least once a day until the asshole leaves (probably because they’re crazy-ass roommate shakes jars at them), you feel the spell’s working, or the jar appears to be growing life.
When ready to dispose of the jar, leave its ass at a crossroads. Don’t forget to celebrate your victory!
Is there some dead asshole ruining your shit and keeping you up at night? Go to the “Dead People Version”.
I meant to make this meme ages ago when pride month was still on but yeah gé (pronounced gay) is the Irish for a goose.
IT’S FINALLY PRIDE MONTH, TIME TO REBLOG THIS AGAIN.
Herbs for Curses & Hexing
So here’s a list I have devised that are good for curses/hexing. Please be warned: many of these are icky and poisonous. Please do your research before handling and please do not ingest. Some of these herbs require a mask and gloves!
Ague Weed ~ makes enemies confused
Angelica Root ~ for curses & hexing
Asafoetida ~ for casting hexes on a person. Sometimes referred to as the devil’s incense, asafoetida is burned to force someone to leave you alone.
Balmony ~ A plant in the figwort family that is ground and used for hexing.
Bindweed ~ curses/hexing.
Bird’s Eye Chilis ~ from the Solanaceae (nightshade) family used for cursing, heating up spells, and for crafting Hoodoo powders like hot foot powder and goofer dust.
Blackthorn Thorns ~ thorns are traditionally used for cursing and protection. The thorns of the Blackthorn tree have long been used in witchcraft for pricking wax or cloth poppets to curse an intended victim.
Black Berry Root ~ this is long used as a protection herb but can also cause bane.
Bladderwrack ~ When placed near an enemies bathroom it is said to cause that enemy to be stricken with irritation of the urinary tract.
Blood Root ~ If you are looking for a substitute for human blood use this blood root to make diabolic wine. Can also be used for general curses.
Blueberry ~ Causes an enemy strife when thrown on his doorstep.
Boneset ~ To burn as an incense and to use during curses.
Chicory ~ used for curses, bringing discord and baneful practices.
Chili Powder ~ for discord, bane, curses
Cinquefoil ~ Burn over a candle wax image of an enemy to cause them discomfort.
Cramp Bark
Hemlock ~ discord, cursing, sadness.
Henbane ~ will cause illness, discord, and melancholy.
Jezebel Root ~ used in the famous Jezebel curse, but can also be used in other curses as well as compelling spells.
Knot Weed ~ To get rid of one’s enemy, stuffed into a black cloth or voodoo doll and sew up, then bury the doll. It is also used with balmony herb in curses.
Lime or Lemon ~ Makes your enemy’s life sour.
Lobelia ~ brings discord
Mace ~ cursing & hexing.
Mandrake ~ for curses and hexes
Morning Glory
Mustard Seed ~ the seed of strife and discord. Leave it at one’s doorstep, particularly black mustard seed. This seed sprinkled around the trunk of a fruit tree on the first evening of the full moon will cause the tree to bear no fruit.
Nightshade/Belladonna ~ Cause an enemy discord/illness
Onion ~ can cause strife in an enemy’s life.
Patchouli ~ sickens enemies when used in chants and spells.
Poke Root ~ will confuse enemies, brings discord when used in curses and hexes.
Poppy Seed ~ Causes couples to argue.
Rue ~ Although it is great protection for the owner in turn rue placed near another person puts a great hex on them.
Spanish Moss ~ used to give bad luck to the intended.
Slippery Elm ~ Used to separate a married couple when buried near their home.
Stinging Nettle ~ can bring sadness, bad luck, hexing
Sumac ~ for curses, hexing, bringing bad luck
Tormentil ~ To cause distress, harm and discord to a foe, sprinkle this on a picture of her or him and place in a box.
Vetivert: Silences ones who will speak ill of you.
Vervain ~ Spells used to contact and speak with Lucifer are the most effective when using this herb. Also used for conjuring evil spirits and demons, as well as placing curses.
Wormwood ~ for curses and hexing your enemy.
Yew ~ used for contacting spirits, but can also be used for curses.
***Good rule: anything spicy or sour can be used in curses.***
It is not my responsibility for any misuse of what I have posted above. Information for curio only.
been thinking about wtnv tweets again
Cottage Witch
One day I hope to live in a cottage on the outskirts of a small country town. I will grow my own vegetables, herbs and fruit. I will bake pies and cakes to sell at the market. I will have chickens clucking about the garden and bees buzzing around the lavender and rosemary hedges. My cottage will have a wrap-around veranda with a small wicker couch and coffee table so I can sit and have a cup of tea in the afternoons while I read a good book.
My neighbours will pop by for a cup of tea and a chat or a pinch of spell-work. Their children know me as the witch at the end of the lane. Some are afraid and some are bold and brash enough to walk up to my front door and demand to see some witchcraft. I happily invite them inside and teach them some little magic, like how to whistle up a breeze or bake wishes into pies.
I will paint, embroider and make pottery from my veranda and spell work will be woven into all. A baby is born in the village? I will sew it a quilt with protection spell sewn into every patch with my dog beside me.
Crows come to visit and tell their tales while I eagerly listen. And one day I will be too old to take care of my little cottage so I will leave it to a niece, nephew or one of the village children who showed a spark of magic.
I will never be rich but I will be content, and that’s what matters.
Old hag by *veprikov
Being a witch is not the highest paid job in the world.
I JUST WANT HER TO GET HER PRETTY PURPLE HAT AND BE HAPPY
I would kill for a companion piece to this, where she gets her hat..
Im sobbing.
no seriously why hasn’t any replied to this image with a picture of her in the pretty hat c’mon tumblr please
Well it’s not much, but here’s a comic:
Enjoy!
DEAD
Reblog every one of these happy end comics I don’t even care