GralhAzul

Grimório da Srª Corvo
enigmaticmagpie:

working shrine for personal stuffs. hello, gods!

enigmaticmagpie:

working shrine for personal stuffs. hello, gods!

(via fuckyeahaltars)

(Fonte: billgurt, via mr-tiki)

(Fonte: alxbngala, via cephalopodqueen)

joeeeseph:

Mom’s Buddhist Shrine

joeeeseph:

Mom’s Buddhist Shrine

(via fuckyeahaltars)

witchyways:

thesabbit:

perpetualgoddamn:

khimara:

The Celestial Quilt – Sleeping Under the Stars

*hyperventilating*

SABRINA RAE.

YOU MAKE THIS FOR ME.

DO IT NOWWWWWWW. <3

Oh man. Dude. Okay.

Gather the materials!

puuuuuuuuuuuurples

ok witchy, get back to work!

(via )

krissydelunamoona:

Hekate, my mother goddess. Representing all the things I love, night, moon, witchcraft, ghosts. When I found her I felt a connection.

krissydelunamoona:

Hekate, my mother goddess. Representing all the things I love, night, moon, witchcraft, ghosts. When I found her I felt a connection.

(via natural-magics)

tremblingcolors:

In Ireland and pre-Roman Britain, there was a trinity of goddesses named Brigantia, (Brigid) “the Exalted One”. Brigid is described as ‘a poetess…a goddess whom poets worshipped’, and her two sisters, both of the same name as herself, women of healing and of smith-work respectively, are also described as goddesses. A tricksterish tale surfaces in the “Life of St. Brigid”: she gets the land for her shrine and abbey from an avaricious bishop..

tremblingcolors:

In Ireland and pre-Roman Britain, there was a trinity of goddesses named Brigantia, (Brigid) “the Exalted One”. Brigid is described as ‘a poetess…a goddess whom poets worshipped’, and her two sisters, both of the same name as herself, women of healing and of smith-work respectively, are also described as goddesses. A tricksterish tale surfaces in the “Life of St. Brigid”: she gets the land for her shrine and abbey from an avaricious bishop..

(via natural-magics)