#a: herbal
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myscentarchive · 19 days ago
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Tuberóza - NISHANE
Extrait de Parfum - 0.7 ml (wand)
Notes- TOP: Ylang Ylang, Sweet Orange, Armoise, Orange Blossom MIDDLE: Tuberose, Gardenia, Jasmine, Marigold BASE: Amberwood, Vetiver, Sandalwood, Musk
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Gender: Unisex Reveals mainly the captivating tuberose of Mexico which is accompanied by other floral notes like gardenia, marigold and jasmine. Strong ambery base is a guarantee for the distinctiveness of the scent.
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ink-the-artist · 5 months ago
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mage
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wizardsaur · 5 months ago
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This is your friendly reminder that herbs aren't inherently safe.
Natural doesn't mean Safe.
Lightning is natural. Opium, therefore heroin and opiate drugs are derived from poppies. Cinnamon oil will burn your skin. Lilies are toxic to cats and will cause organ failure. Activated charcoal will neutralize your prescription medications and literally anything else in your system. St. John's Wort will destroy your serotonin production and mess with your happiness threshold if it DOESNT KILL YOU FIRST.
So anyway.
Do some damn good research every time you go to eat, breathe, bring around your pets, bathe in, or smoke something. Be safe please.
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swoo0zy · 2 months ago
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his herbal tea 💔
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the-mortuary-witch · 2 months ago
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GRIMORE IDEAS
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Start a lunar or dream diary. 
Write spells. 
Astrology meanings. 
Write and record rituals 
Tarot meanings. 
Magickal correspondences. 
Your natal chart info. 
Herb names, uses, and/or properties. 
Info about deities and entities. 
Crystals names, uses, and/or properties. 
Magickal food recipes. 
Faeries. 
Meditation techniques. 
Full moon names. 
Sigils.
Runes.
How to use a pendulum.
Wheel of the Year. 
Essential oil uses. 
How to scry.
Maiden, Mother, and Crone. 
The Elements. 
History of witchcraft. 
The difference between jinxes, hexes, and curses. 
Morning and night rituals. 
How to celebrate/info about the Sabbats. 
Types of salt and their properties. 
Moon phases and their corresponding meanings. 
Types of divination. 
Planet correspondences. 
Candle colour meanings. 
How to draw and/or cast a circle, runes, and sigils. 
Tools of the craft. 
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the-astral-express-archive · 2 months ago
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Honkai: Star Rail CN x 加多宝 (Jiaduobao) Herbal Tea Collab Promotional Artwork
Download: Google Drive
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ad-caelestia · 2 months ago
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“bitch, be gone” powder
an old favorite from long ago
ingredients:
cinnamon
cayenne pepper
black pepper or black salt
rosemary
sage
garlic salt
chamomile
instructions:
combine, grind, and sprinkle around doors and windows to banish unwanted energy and to prevent the entrance of these energies in the future
© 2024 ad-caelestia
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inusmasha · 1 year ago
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Sometimes it’s hard to read fanfic when you’re studying herbalism.. when they have the character preparing a tincture to use that same DAY!!?
Baby those dried herbs need to sit in that jar with high proof alcohol for at LEAST a month!
That’s why before the use of calendars ppl use to prepare their tinctures either on the new moon or full moon. A a full moon cycle is usually 28 days or so. And they would give the moon names so it’s easier to remember when/what month said tincture was bottled.
This is also why herbal medicine is prepare in small batches. You have to take your time preparing your bottles. Making sure everything is clean so you don’t end up with mold. Diluting your grain alcohol. Heckkk knowing when to pick your herbs for max potency! Drying your herbs! That takes a lot of time too!
I didn’t mean to rant lol
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cuties-in-codices · 3 months ago
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botanical illustrations
from the codex fuchs (vol. VIII), a manuscript edition of the notable commentaries on the history of plants by leonhart fuchs, tübingen, c. 1540-66
source: Vienna, ÖNB, Cod. 11124
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artlefty · 1 year ago
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Sometimes I read a tma fic that has the tea martin is serving be like some...fancy herbal or floral stuff.
My dude, come here for a second-
This is a workplace in England. It is Tetley. It is PG Tips. It is yorkshire gold.
It is NOT ginger hibiscus or green tea or fuscia with parma violets. it is a cuppa. It is a regular ass cuppa tea with some milk in it. Maybe some sugar.
Serving unprompted herbal tea to a coworker is a violent act of hatred. It is a decree of warfare.
Your boss asks you to make them a cuppa and you put Ginseng Green Sea Buckthorn tea on their desk? You are telling them you hate their guts. You are letting them know that you think they are the worst person on Earth.
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crazycatsiren · 3 months ago
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I'm gonna go ahead and say this one more time, as someone whose ancestors literally evolved traditional medicine, 'cause I been seeing some dumb shit on social media again.
The average joe schmol doesn't possess enough knowledge of actual traditional medicine to know what the hell they're doing. Chances are, they end up whipping some rando concoction that at best does nothing, at worst is toxic.
The difference between medicine and poison is often the dosage.
Herbalism, alternative healing, home remedies, they do have their places in the modern world. But unless you really know what the fuck you're doing, you're better off and much safer with something FDA approved, than listen to some white lady with dreadlocks on TikTok who calls herself a "natural healer" and literally teaches you how to poison yourself.
I research and study herbs for fun, and my herb collection is way bigger and more practical than some souped up pretty picture on the internet. And you know what's the first thing I go for when I have a migraine? Excedrin.
When in doubt, modern medicine first, everything else supplemental.
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myscentarchive · 22 days ago
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Woody Sage - dossier
Inspired by Jo Malone's Wood Sage & Sea Salt Eau de Parfum - 2 ml (atomizer) Eau de Parfum - 50 ml
Notes- TOP: Fig Tree, Grapefruit MIDDLE: Marine Notes, Ambrette BASE: Clary Sage, Amberwood
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Concentration: 18% Gender: Unisex
Woody Sage (inspired by Jo Malone's Wood Sage & Sea Salt) opens with a lively cocktail of fig and grapefruit, pierced by the scent of the sea. Utilizing a mineral salty accord and calone, this combination perfectly mimics a fresh sea breeze. Next, we travel greater depths with notes of ambery driftwoods and sage stepping on the scene. The result is a combination of aromatic raw materials paired with floral, minty, earthy, and camphorated notes.
Natural, evocative, and lively, Woody Sage (our impression of Jo Malone's Wood Sage & Sea Salt) is a breath of fresh air while standing atop a seaside cliff.
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reasonsforhope · 5 months ago
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"Despite the Central Appalachia ecosystem being historically famous as coal country, under this diverse broadleaf canopy lies a rich, biodiverse world of native plants helping to fill North America’s medicinal herb cabinet.
And it turns out that the very communities once reliant on the coalfields are now bringing this botanical diversity to the country.
“Many different Appalachian people, stretching from pre-colonization to today, have tended, harvested, sold, and used a vast number of forest botanicals like American ginseng, ramps, black cohosh, and goldenseal,” said Shannon Bell, Virginia Tech professor in the Dept. of Sociology. “These plants have long been integral to many Appalachians’ livelihoods and traditions.”
50% of the medicinal herbs, roots, and barks in the North American herbal supply chain are native to the Appalachian Mountains, and the bulk of these species are harvested or grown in Central Appalachia, which includes southern West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, far-southwest Virginia, and east Tennessee.
The United Plant Savers, a nonprofit with a focus on native medicinal plants and their habitats, has identified many of the most popular forest medicinals as species of concern due to their declining populations.
Along with the herbal supply chain being largely native to Appalachia, the herb gatherers themselves are also native [to Appalachia, not Native American specifically], but because processing into medicine and seasonings takes place outside the region, the majority of the profits from the industry do too.
In a press release on Bell’s superb research and advocacy work within Appalachia’s botanical communities, she refers back to the moment that her interest in the industry and the region sprouted; when like many of us, she was out in a nearby woods waiting out the pandemic.
“My family and I spent a lot of time in the woods behind our house during quarantine,” Bell said. “We observed the emergence of all the spring ephemerals in the forest understory – hepatica, spring beauty, bloodroot, trillium, mayapple. I came to appreciate the importance of the region’s botanical biodiversity more than ever, and realized I wanted to incorporate this new part of my life into my research.”
With co-investigator, John Munsell at VA Tech’s College of Natural Resources and Environment, Bell’s project sought to identify ways that Central Appalachian communities could retain more of the profits from the herbal industry while simultaneously ensuring that populations of at-risk forest botanicals not only survive, but thrive and expand in the region.
Bell conducted participant observation and interviews with wild harvesters and is currently working on a mail survey with local herb buyers. She also piloted a ginseng seed distribution program, and helped a wild harvester write a grant proposal to start a forest farm.
“Economic development in post-coal communities often focuses on other types of energy development, like fracking and natural gas pipelines, or on building prisons and landfills. Central Appalachia is one of the most biodiverse places on the planet. I think that placing a greater value on this biodiversity is key to promoting a more sustainable future for the region,” Bell told VA Tech press.
Armed with a planning grant of nearly half a million dollars, Bell and collaborators are specifically targeting forest farming as a way to achieve that sustainable future.
Finally, enlisting support from the nonprofit organization Appalachian Sustainable Development, Virginia Tech, the City of Norton, a sculpture artist team, and various forest botanicals practitioners in her rolodex, Bell organized the creation of a ‘living monument’ along Flag Rock Recreation Area in Norton, Virginia.
An interpretive trail, the monument tells the story of the historic uses that these wild botanicals had for the various societies that have inhabited Appalachia, and the contemporary value they still hold for people today."
-via Good News Network, September 12, 2024
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daddyfuckedme · 4 months ago
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lilianasgrimoire · 10 months ago
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Herb Correspondences - S-Z
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Sage - Used for self-purification and cleansing.  Helps grief and loss. Healing and protection also increase wisdom.   Element Air. 
Sandalwood - Burn during protection, healing, and exorcism spells.  Aids luck and success, meditation and divination. Raises a high spiritual vibration. Element Water. 
Skullcap - Aids in love, fidelity and peace.  Increases harmony. Element Water. 
Sea Salt - Use to cleanse crystals and tools.  For purification, grounding and protection.  Supports ritual work. Absorbs negativity and banishes evil.  Element Earth & Water.  
Sheep's Purse - Prosperity, protection and healing. Element Earth. 
Sheep Sorrel - Carry to protect against heart disease. Cleansing and increases luck.  Use in faery magic. Element Earth. 
St. John's Wort - Worn to prevent colds & fevers.  Induces prophetic and romantic dreams. Protects against hexes and black witchcraft.  Increases happiness. Use in Solar Magic. Element Fire. 
Star Anise - Consecration, purification, and happiness.  Use for curse breaking or increasing luck. Burn to increase psychic awareness.   Element Fire.  
Strawberry Leaf - Attracts success, good fortune, and favorable circumstances. Increases love and aids pregnancy. Element Water. 
Sunflower - Energy, protection, and power.  Aids wisdom and brings about wishes.  Use in fertility magic. Element Fire. 
Sweet Cicely - Use during rituals for the dead or dying.  It helps with divination and the contact of the spirit.  It is sacred to the Goddess’ of death. Element Earth. 
Sweetwood - See Cinnamon.   
Tansy - See Agrimony.  
Tarragon - Increases self-confidence.  Use in Dragon magic. Aids healing after abusive situations.   Element Fire. 
Tea Leaves - Use for courage or strength. In tea for increasing lust. Burn leaves to ensure future riches.  Element Air. 
Thistle - See Blessed Thistle.  
Thyme - Attracts loyalty, affection, and love. Increases good luck and psychic power.  Drink tea to aid sleep. Element Air.  
Valerian - Also called Graveyard dust. Aids sleep is calming and is a sedative.  Quietens emotions. Supports protection and love. Element Water. 
Vervain - Strengthen other herbs. Helps, peace, love and happiness.  Burn the leaves to attract wealth and keep your youth. Increases chastity also.  Element Water. 
Verbena - Psychic protection, peace and purification.  Healing and helps depression. Increases beauty and love.  Mind opening and clearing. Ideal use for exams. Element Earth.  
Violet - See Heart’s Ease.  
White Willow Bark - Use in lunar magic.  Reduces negativity and removes evil forces and hexes.  Used for healing spells. Element Water. 
Willow - Used for lunar magic, drawing or strengthening love, healing, and overcoming sadness.  Element Water. 
Witches Grass - Happiness, lust, love, and exorcism. Reverses hexes.  Element Earth.  
Wood Betony - Use for purification, protection, and the expulsion of evil spirits and nightmares.  Draws love in your direction. Element Fire. 
Woodruff - Victory, protection, and money.  Element Air. 
Wormwood - Used to remove anger, stop war, inhibit violent acts, and for protection. Use in clairvoyance, to summon spirits, or to enhance divinatory abilities. Element Earth. 
Yarrow - Healing, calming and increases love. Used in handfasting & weddings.  Increases psychic power and divination. Gives courage when needed. Element Air. 
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