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Baklava Recipes 😍
(recipes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)
Quelques Lagerthas sont encore disponibles en ligne 🙂 Chrysocolle, Labradorite, Lapis-lazuli et Péristérite ! Je suis pas mal occupée en ce moment avec la mise en place des ateliers, le 1er de la saison a lieu ce soir 😁 Toutes les places sont prises, mais je peux faire un second groupe. N'hésitez pas à m'envoyer un message si cela vous intéresse. Au programme : 2 séances de 3h de Micro-macramé et la conception d'un bracelet et d'une paire de boucles d'oreilles. Du coup, plus beaucoup de temps pour la création, voilà plus d'une semaine que je travaille sur un gros plastron avec 3 pierres sans avoir le temps de le finaliser …. la semaine prochaine, je refais des boucles d'oreilles rondes comme les dernières que jai posté et surtout je me mets sur une somptueuse commande personnalisée d'une parure Agate dendritique et Péristérite 💙 Je vous posterai aussi des photos des ateliers, en attendant, allez faire un tour sur le shop Etsy, pleins d'articles vous y attendent. J'envoie toujours dans les 48h vos commandes … ce matin, un collier est parti pour le Canada 🍁 Merci à vous tous pour votre confiance 🌱 . . . . . . . #macrame #micromacramejewelry #macramenecklace #witchstyle #frenchfashion #bohemia #bohomacrame #moonwitch #goddessjewelry #alternativefashion #altgirl #bohojewelry #macramejewelry #stonejewelry #micromacrame #macramelover #vintagejewellery #vintage #torque #hippiestyle #gypsystyle #stonenecklace #witchjewelry #witchcraft #bijou #bijouxcreateur #hautecouture #besançon #franchecomte #mmejeannette (à Franche-Comte, France) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGH1V_DHh8D/?igshid=1t03ugiftkhcy
Edited to add original source, with additional photos: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/first-female-bodybuilders-1900s/
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Love spell jar
♡ Dried rose petals
♡ Cinnamon
♡ Witch Hazel
♡ Majorum
♡ Lavender
♡ Rose quartz
♡ Fennel Seeds
♡ Dried Orange peel
♡ Heart shaped snow quartz crystal
♡ Honey
♡ Sugar
♡ Moon Water
♡ Sealed with pink candle
Ingredients: • ¾ cup/180ml of culinary grade dried rose petals (or fresh pesticide free petals) • 1 cup/250ml of unrefined granulated/castor sugar (or sugar of choice) • 1 cup/250ml of filtered water Method: Put all ingredients in a stove top pot and simmer on medium low heat for 30 minutes or longer, until rose petals lose colour and the sugar is dissolved. Turn off heat and let sit on stove for 45 minutes to an hour steeping, you can add more rose petals if you want even more flavour. After steeping strain the liquid twice through a mesh strainer and store in an airtight container/glass. Refrigeration is recommended for guaranteed freshness.
The first use for cemetery water is to connect with the dead. Because this water is infused with death energy, its function is similar to graveyard dirt.
Put cemetery water into death witch or necromancy-related spells. I used some in my spirit work oil and necromancy ink. You can also add it to salves and oils (not on the body). Dipping a candle in it (not the wick!) and letting it dry might enhance a candle spell. Add a tiny bit to dampen your herbal smoking blend should you want to go hedgecrossing or divine.
To simplify, view cemetery water as a spirit work booster. Anything you add it to should help you connect with the dead.
Another use for cemetery water is lecanomancy, otherwise known as water scrying. Since ancient Rome, necromancers have peered into water to receive messages from the dead.
To practice water scrying, grab a clear bowl (glass is ideal) and pour cemetery water into it. Make sure that the bowl is not too dark; you want to see the water. Light a candle and keep it nearby to illuminate the space. Some people put a bit of olive oil into the water, but that is not necessary. Breathe evenly, clear your mind, and peer into the water. See what the dead wish to show you.
Another potential use for cemetery water is protection. Depending on the folklore, even imitating water can protect you from spirits.
Rub cemetery water onto your windows and doors to ward your home. While leaving a cemetery, toss some water behind you so that spirits don’t follow you home. Painting certain objects in the color of water might dissuade spirits from touching them. Include it in washes to cleanse your divination tools.
To read more folklore about ghosts and water, read the full blog post.
****These are used as Suggestions****
Rosemary can be used in place of other herbs
Rose can be used in place of any other flower
Frankincense or Copal can replace gum resin
Sage in place of any mints
Tobacco in place of any poisonous herbs
Acacia substitute Gum Arabic
Aconitie substitute Tobacco
Arabic substitute gum ,gum mastic or frankincense
Allspice substitute cassia, cinnamon, cloves ,mace or nutmeg
Balm of gilded substitute rose buds or gum mastic
Belladonna substitute Tobacco
Benzoin substitute Gum Arabic or gum mastic
Camphor oil substitute Eucalyptus oil or lavender oil
Carnation substitute rose petals anointed with a few drops of cinnamon oil
Cassia substitute cinnamon
Castor beans substitute for a few drops of castor oil
Cedar substitute sandlewood
Cinquefoil substitute clover or trefoil
Citron substitute equal parts Orange & lemon peels
Clove substitute mace or nutmeg
Clover substitute cinquefoil
Copal substitute frankincense or cedar
Cowbane substitute tobacco
Cypress substitute juniper or pine needles
Deer tongue substitute tonka bean, woodruff or vanilla
Dittany substitute gum mastic
Dragons blood substitute equal parts frankincense and red sandlewood
Eucalyptus oil substitute camphor oil or lavender oil
Euphorbium substitute Tobacco
Frankincense substitute copal or pine resin
Grains of paradise substitute black pepper
Gum bumelia substitute copal, pine resin or dragons blood
Hellebore substitute tobacco or nettle
Hemlock substitute Tobacco
Hemp substitute nutmeg or damiana
Henbone substitute Tobacco
Hyssop substitute lavender
Ivy substitute cinquefoil
Jasmin substitute rose
Juniper substitute pine
Lavender substitute rose
Lemon Grass substitute lemon peel
Lemon verbena substitute Lemon grass or lemon peel
Mace substitute nutmeg
Mandrake substitute Tobacco
Mastic substitute gum, gum Arabic or Frankincense
Mint substitute sage
Mistletoe substitute mint or sage
Mugwort substitute wormwood
Neroli oil substitute orange oil
Nightshade substitute Tobacco
Nutmeg substitute mace or cinnamon
Oakmoss substitute patchouli
Orange substitute tangerine peel
Orange flower substitute orange peel
Patchouli substitute oakmoss
Peppermint substitute spearmint
Pepperwort substitute grain of paradise or black pepper
Pine substitute juniper
Pine resin substitute frankincense or copal
Red Sandlewood substitute sandlewood with a pinch of dragons blood
Rose substitute yarrow
Rose geranium substitute rose
Rue substitute rosemary with a pinch of black pepper
Saffron substitute orange peel
Sandalwood substitute cedar
Sarsaparilla substitute sassafras
Spearmint substitute peppermint
Star Anise substitute bay
Sulfur substitute tobacco, club moss or asafetida
Thyme substitute rosemary
Tobacco substitute bay
Tonka bean substitute deer tongue
Trefoil substitute cinquefoil
Valerian substitute asafetide
Vanilla substitute woodruff or deer tongue
Vetivert substitute calamus
Wolfsbane substitute tobacco
Wood aloe substitute sandalwood sprinkled with ambergris oil
Woodruff substitute deer tongue or vanilla
Wormwood substitute nutmeg
Yarrow substitute rose
Yew substitute Tobacco
The Wild Called Me Back.
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