Blog Posts
Pentagram
The pentagram is a five-pointed star symbol with ancient roots in Mesopotamia, Greece, and early Christianity, where it represented protection, balance, and spiritual harmony. In occult traditions, an upright pentagram symbolizes spirit ruling over matter, while an inverted one often focuses on earthly needs. Today, it remains a powerful symbol in Wicca, Paganism, and personal magic, representing the elements of nature and the spirit. Despite modern misunderstandings linking it to evil, the pentagram’s true meaning honors the connection between body, soul, and the natural world.
Thor's Hammer Mjolnir
Mjolnir, the hammer of Thor, is a powerful symbol of protection, strength, and blessing in Norse mythology. Forged by the dwarven brothers Eitri and Brokkr after Loki’s trickery, it controls lightning, flies back to Thor’s hand, and can only be lifted by the worthy. Mjolnir plays a key role in myths like the theft by Thrym and the final battle of Ragnarok. Beyond ancient stories, it remains a strong symbol today, seen in modern media, jewelry, and Viking artifacts, showing its lasting impact on both history and popular culture.
Ankh
The Ankh is an ancient Egyptian symbol shaped like a cross with a loop on top that stood for life, protection, and rebirth after death. You see it in temple carvings, tomb paintings, and on gods like Isis and Osiris. In hieroglyphs, it meant “life,” and priests used it in rituals to bless the living and the dead. Over time, its style grew more ornate, and today it appears in jewelry, art, and spiritual practices around the world—though it loses some of its power if we forget its sacred Egyptian roots.