I'm thinking about making some recolors of some Angelology II designs! I'm deciding between self-funding a small quantity each throughout the year - or, putting them up for preorder in the next Angelology IV campaign. The recolors would be as follows:
All-Seeing Eye with silver plating
Angelic Grim without glitter enamel
Colorwheel Throne with rainbow plating and epoxy
Illumination with orange colors
Three-Legged Seraph with silver plating
And here are the original colorways so you can sort of imagine how the recolors would turn out.
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Happy to announce that my store is now open!!!
New stuff is from @ultrainfinitepit's Angelology II Kickstarter campaign that I designed! If you missed your chance to pledge for the campaign, I have plenty of these pins in stock.
The selkie print design is a collaboration between myself and @claiborneart, who did the sketch and colors! Stygiomedusa Gigantea angel is now available in sticker form also :)
SHOP MENU
Pins:
-Stygiomedusa Gigantea Angel-$12
-Drowned Angel-$20
-Icarus Angel-$16
-Hydra Angel-$16
-Blue Deer Angel(glow in the dark!)-$14
-Red Deer Angel(Glow in the dark!)-$14
-Wine Red Sunken Angel-$16
-Ocean Blue Sunken Angel-$16
Other:
-Blood Moon Selkie print-$13
-Stygiomedusa Gigantea Sticker-$4
Shop Link
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Missed out on getting my angel pins and print from the Angelology II Kickstarter campaign by @ultrainfinitepit ? Visit my brand-new Etsy shop, where I'm selling the extras!
etsy.com/shop/HalakahikiShop
You'll be able to get the 8"x8" print or the pins in A or B-Grade.
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Pin Campaign Ideas
I promised myself "no more collab campaigns" but I've been having ideas anyway, I will leave them here.
Rainbow Demonology II
Rainbow Angelology (like Rainbow Demonology but with named angels!)
Angel Original Characters
Angel Pinups
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ARCHANGEL SERIES
Todays blog is on Archangel Ariel A.K.A Uriel the angel of nature & the lion of God
Ariel (Hebrew: אֲרִיאֵל, romanized: ʾÁrīʾēl) is an angel found primarily in Jewish and Christian mysticism and Apocrypha. The literal meaning is "lion of God". The word Ariel occurs in the Hebrew Bible at Isaiah 29:1, 29:2, What sorrow awaits Ariel, the city of David. Year after year you celebrate your feasts. Yet I will bring disaster upon you and there will be much weeping and sorrow. Ariel means an Altar covered with Blood. and 29:7, where it refers to Jerusalem. The word appears at II Samuel 23:20 and I Chronicles 11:22 as referring to "men of valor" of Moab. It appears at Ezekiel 43:16 as referring to an "altar hearth", and it appears at Ezra 8:16 as the name of a Jewish man. It is also said that Ariel is not a rebel angel.
According to the German occultist Cornelius Agrippa (1486–1535): "Ariel is the name of an angel, sometimes also of a demon, and of a city, whence called Ariopolis, where the idol is worshipped."
"Ariel" has been called an ancient name for the leontomorphic Gnostic Demiurge (Creator God). Historically, the entity Ariel was often pictured in mysticism as a lion-headed deity with power over the Earth, giving a strong foundation for Ariel's association with the Demiurge. It is possible that the name itself was even adopted from the Demiurge's Zoroastrian counterpart Ahriman (who is likely the predecessor of the Mithraic "Arimanius").[citation needed]
"Ariel" is sometimes associated with the better known Judeo-Christian Archangel Uriel, as for example some sources claim that the Elizabethan court astrologer John Dee called "Ariel" a "conglomerate of Anael and Uriel," though this is not mentioned where the name Anael appears in the only conversation of Dee with Barnabas Saul.
In Thomas Heywood, Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels (1635) Ariel is called both a prince who rules the waters and "Earth's great Lord." In several occult writings,[who?] Ariel is mentioned with other elemental titles such as the "3rd archon of the winds," "spirit of air," "angel of the waters of the Earth" and "wielder of fire." In mysticism, especially modern, Ariel is usually depicted as a governing angel with dominion over the Earth, creative forces, the North, elemental spirits, and beasts. Other entries in angelologies to Ariel are found in Jacques Collin de Plancy, Dictionnaire Infernal (1863) and Moïse Schwab Vocabulaire de l'Angélologie (1897)
As with all archangels, Ariel is sometimes depicted in male form; she is, however, more often seen as female. She oversees the protection and healing of animals and plants, as well as the care of the Earth's elements (such as water, wind, and fire). She punishes those who harm God's creation. In some interpretations, Ariel is also a liaison between the human and the elemental world of sprites, faeries, mystical crystals, and other manifestations of magic.
In art, Ariel is often depicted with a globe representing the Earth, or with elements of nature (such as water, fire, or rocks), to symbolize Ariel's role caring for God's creation on Earth. Ariel appears sometimes in male form and other times in the female form. She is often shown in pale pink or rainbow colors.
Origins of Ariel
In the Bible, Ariel's name is used to refer to the holy city of Jerusalem in Isaiah 29, but the passage itself doesn't refer to Archangel Ariel. The Jewish apocryphal text the Wisdom of Solomon describes Ariel as an angel who punishes demons. The Christian Gnostic text Pistis Sophia also says that Ariel works punishing the wicked. Later texts describe Ariel's role caring for nature, including the "Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels" (published in the 1600s), which calls Ariel "Earth's great lord."
One of the Angelic Virtues
The angels were divided, according to St. Thomas Aquinas and other medieval authorities, into groups sometimes referred to as "choirs." The choirs of angels include the seraphim and cherubim, as well as many other groups. Ariel is part of (or perhaps the leader of) the class of angels called the virtues, who inspire people on Earth to create great art and make great scientific discoveries, encourage them, and deliver miracles from God into people's lives. Here is how one of the medieval theologians called Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite described the virtues in his work De Coelesti Hierarchia:
"The name of the holy Virtues signifies a certain powerful and unshakable virility welling forth into all their Godlike energies; not being weak and feeble for any reception of the divine Illuminations granted to it; mounting upwards in fullness of power to an assimilation with God; never falling away from the Divine Life through its own weakness, but ascending unwaveringly to the superessential Virtue which is the Source of virtue: fashioning itself, as far as it may, in virtue; perfectly turned towards the Source of virtue, and flowing forth providentially to those below it, abundantly filling them with virtue."
How to Request Help From Ariel
Ariel serves as the patron angel of wild animals. Some Christians consider Ariel to be the patron saint of new beginnings.
People sometimes ask for Ariel's help to take good care of the environment and God's creatures (including both wild animals and pets) and to provide healing that they need, according to God's will (Ariel works with the archangel Raphael when healing). Ariel can also help you to forge a stronger connection with the natural or elemental world.
To call upon Ariel, you need only request her guidance for goals that are within her realm. For example, you might ask her "please help me to heal this animal," or "please help me to better understand the beauty of the natural world." You can also burn an archangel candle dedicated to Ariel; such candles are typically pale pink or rainbow colored.
I hope you enjoyed this blog more to follow
Regards,
Culture Calypso’s Blog 🦁
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