2 New Specials in May! 🌼 Visit Our Shop
Free Spellcasting Consultations: Contact Us

By Witchipedia

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Crystals and Minerals

Metal Tin: Magickal Uses & Correspondences

This article examines the metal tin from a magickal and esoteric perspective, providing an overview of its historical significance, elemental correspondences, and applications within spiritual practice. Readers will learn about tin’s associations with the planet Jupiter, the element air, and specific zodiac signs, as well as its traditional uses in practices related to luck, prosperity, divination, and travel protection.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Crystals and Minerals

Tiger’s Eye: Folklore, Associations, Care, Magickal Uses

This article provides a comprehensive overview of tiger’s eye, a banded gemstone composed of oxide and quartz, examining its historical significance, folkloric traditions, and contemporary applications within spiritual practice. The text explores the stone’s documented use from Ancient Egypt through the Middle Ages, its associations with various deities, astrological correspondences, and chakra alignments, as well as traditional beliefs regarding its protective and empowering properties.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Spells

The Witch Bottle (DIY Guide) for Protection

This article presents an overview of the witch bottle, a traditional protective device used in folk magic practices intended to absorb and neutralize harmful spells directed at individuals or households. The text outlines the historical context, recommended timing based on lunar phases and planetary correspondences, suggested materials including personal effects and symbolic objects, and step-by-step instructions for constructing and activating the bottle.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Magical Religions and Spiritual Paths

What is The Wiccan Rede

This article examines the Wiccan Rede, a foundational ethical principle within Wiccan practice summarized by the phrase “An it harm none, do what ye will,” tracing its documented origins to Doreen Valiente’s 1964 public articulation and exploring its relationship to Gerald Gardner’s earlier teachings. The discussion covers various textual versions of the Rede, including the “long rede” variants published in the 1970s, and distinguishes the Rede from related texts such as the Witches’ Creed.