This is another line I wish was good but I just see blobs of plastic and poor quality control

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titsay
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JBB: An Artblog!
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tannertan36
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@sirenadellasestrellas
This is another line I wish was good but I just see blobs of plastic and poor quality control
The Aztecs believed that a soul-like aspect of oneself left the body while one slept, and spent time in the dream world as a “nagual.” A nagual is a sort of spirit animal (very rough translation). If one’s nagual got hurt, then one’s body got hurt.
I remember last year my mom sending me a message through Facebook on how to set up an ofrenda based on a timetable, which I had no idea that was how it could be done.
All I know for sure the main objects are
Glasses of water to quench the souls
Candles (preferably one for each soul you're remembering, but don't stress on the amount if it's a lot ^^)
A vial of salt to purify the souls
Copal incense to purify the area
Papel picado to represent wind
Their favorite food, also represents earth
Cempasúchil (marigolds) to represent the sun in the afterlife
Something I've noticed trying to do my own research into how to set up my Altar to turn it into a proper ofrenda, is that in English it's damn near impossible to find the information on how it should be done day by day. Surprisingly, it was just as hard to find in Spanish, although I'm not sure if I was using the right terms.
So for anyone who would like help setting up their ofrenda, here are the day by day steps I was told to follow:
Oct 28th, the first candle is lit and a white flower is placed on the ofrenda to welcome lonely souls.
Oct 29th, another candle is lit and the first glass of water is placed for the forgotten.
Oct 30th, another candle lit, another glass of water, and white bread is placed on the ofrenda for those who left without eating.
Oct 31st, a lit candle, glass of water, and another white bread as well as fruit are added to the ofrenda. This day is dedicated to great and great-great grandparents.
Nov 1st, All Saints Day. This day is dedicated to children. All the food (and toys) should be presented on this day.
Nov 2nd, All Souls Day (Day of the Faithful Departed). The adult souls arrive to visit, collect, and eat the ofrendas. Copal incense is burned and the path leading up to the ofrenda is adorned with cempasúchil petals to guide the souls to your offerings.
Nov 3rd, the last candle is lit and copal is burned. The souls are sent off and bid to visit next year.
This by no means is a strict guideline, and I can't even guarantee for sure how genuine it is to traditionalism, but what I can say is it helped me tremendously in setting up my Altar.
Some people have all the food set out a week in advance, and some don't put anything out until the day of. What matters is having fun and enjoying your set-up no matter how minimal it may be.
La lotería.
Art by @malditoperrito.
Perrito is such a great Mexican artist, please follow him on Twitter.
Feliz #diadelosmuertos ! Here are my pieces for the &Gallery Lore show last month! I had Día de Los Muertos in mind. Prints are available at &Gallery in Tucson!
Here are the saints of magia blanca (white magic) - Señora Santa Muerte and La Virgen de Guadalupe- whom both have powers of healing and protection. I hope everyone can remember their loved ones fondly in these two days of celebration!
Death. Art by Lindsay D. Williams, from Desert Illuminations Tarot.
Today we feature the “Death” card of the Major Arcana of the #desertilluminationstarot. Based on the dia de los muertos holiday in Mexico which honors the dead which is also celebrated in the United States.
“Death…everyone dreads this card but it actually can be positive. In life we experience death every day while we are alive. In fact we live to die. Everyone you know will someday will die. Death does not discriminate. This also could symbolize the end of a phase and the transitioning into something new. In order to move forward we must let the past die. The messenger of death asks you to remember that everything eventually comes to an end and that nothing lasts forever. Death clears the path cleansing the energy for something new to come into fruition. What can you let “die” in your life to usher in something new to create positive change and to live the life that you desire? All we have is now so live for today!” ☠️
Feliz día de los muertos 💀🖤
Here's a pic of my Santa Muerte Costume in action.
I've worked on this Costume and props since june. And i'm so happy with the final result !!!!🖤
Can you spot the faces and hands in the mist ?
Happy Halloween y'all
cara mia 🥀
(Don’t delete caption 🌩)
By Txema Yeste for Vogue Spain
This is an Aztec Death Whistle. Making a piercing noise that resembles a human scream, the Aztecs would use these whistles in a time of war to scare their enemies. Hundreds of whistles were played all at once to give the perception that the dead were coming after them.
ART OF THE ANCIENT AMERICAS I: AZTECS
Aztec civilization dominated Mesoamerica from the 12th - 16th centuries. The descriptor “Aztec” is a collective term, coined by Alexander von Humboldt in 1820, to apply to all the people linked by trade, custom, religion, and language to the Mexica state, based in its capital city of Tenochtitlan, and/or subject to the Triple Alliance that constituted the Aztec Empire.
Igor Volos Art - Xochipilli
Xochipilli is in Aztec mythology a god associated with love, beauty, dance, flowers, poetry and music. Its name contains the Nahuatl words xochitl (flower) and pilli (prince, nobleman or child), so it means the “prince of flowers”.
Monique Muñoz Art - Aztec Spirit Guide
A spirit guide is an entity that remains as a disincarnate spirit to act as a guide or protector to a living incarnated human being. Connecting to your spirit guides is about learning to rely on the voice of love.