Crinkled Velvet Backless Crop Top in Juniper Green (on sale: $95) & Crinkled Velvet Pleated Trousers in Juniper Green (on sale: $149) from NBD
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@seabeck's dog Juniper posing on a stump on the Gold Mountain Trail
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Crystals I like in my kitchen.
I've been on my witchy path for 19 years now, and I will admit crystals are the area I'm the least versed in. However, I've found a few that I like to keep on my kitchen altar that help with the energy while I'm doing kitchen and domestic magic.
Clear quartz to amplify the energies I'm putting into my work.
Green aventurine radiates abundance and growth, and its presence feels like a charm in and of itself to keep food in our fridge and pantry.
Citrine is one of my favorite stones, and I seek to channel its positivity and joy as I work.
For anyone who is into crystals or kitchen witchery: what are your favorite stones and gems in the kitchen and why?
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Excuse me could you do a palette based on the name Juniper, please?
7b8665 || #4b594a || #a8a893 || #d4cbb2 || #4a3838
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Juniper is among my favorite wild forgeables, as the berries are typically easily accessible, and where I live, it grows abundantly. While most people forage for the berries, I also love juniper for its branches and needles. There is more writing about this in Scottish magical traditions, but juniper can be a useful cleansing tool when bundled, dried, and burned. Given the endangered nature of palo santo and white sage – and being a roots practitioner who believes wholeheartedly that one should not engage in traditions of closed practices – I try to keep my clearing practices to using alternative herbs and plants native to my own ancestral practices. Juniper was certainly used by my ancestors, and you can find a fair amount of documentation in the folk magic traditions of Sweden, Denmark, and Norway.
Juniper also makes for beautiful decorations for yule. The berries are wonderful in teas and have medicinal properties such as being helpful for bacteria and viruses.
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