Anyone who wears this sign amulet becomes a son or daughter of a great Veles.
For such people, all roads are open, and all risky activities gravitate to a successful outcome.
Paw Great Beast captured on this amulet, and under this majestic paw pass life ward Véles. The primary meaning of the bear spirit animal is strength and confidence. Standing against adversity; taking action and leadership.
Mjolnir pendant (Olaf cross)
Our Wolf Cross is a re-creation of a famous Icelandic pendant worn by both pagan Vikings and Christians alike. It is a symbol of the cross and Thor's Hammer coming together in an open cross within the cross, celebrating the life force of the sun. The wolf's head marks respect for animal cunning.
I got so many compliments when I wear my yggdrasil / tree of life pendant! The rich blue glitter is so eye-catching and it's available with a choice of three different length chain. Available now at karencreftorart.etsy.com (clickable link in bio). Limited edition, hard enamel, silver coloured metal with blue glitter enamel. . . . #yggdrasil #treeofknowledge #treeoflife #odin #vikings #modernviking #norseart #norse #norsemythology #celtic #celticknot #celticknotwork #vikingpendant #norsependant #enamelpendant #pendant #hardenamelpin https://www.instagram.com/p/B083DRChqUx/?igshid=1ulfy8qmro4mk
Hello everybody! Please check out our newest creation – a wolf shaped rune pendant. Not so bad, what do you think? Sadly, the chinese will steal the design and make their cheap copies from unkown alloys and sell on aliexpress before too long... #viking #vikings #forgedpendant #wolfhead #vikingpendant #forged #runes #wolfrune #handmade #vikingculture #vikingstyle #vikingjewelry #magicrebel #magicrebelshop #norse #pagan https://www.instagram.com/p/BvQZGV5ni2h/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Handcrafted Viking Amulet Mjölnir - made from antique Tibetan silver and comes on a silver plated chain. The Mjolnir is solid, doublefaced 3D by hand casting.
Folks are always asking me how I carve the runes in the pendants I make. It seems some think it’s nothing more than a single strike of a chisel.
Nope. Not even close. I rather wish I could knock the runes out that fast, but I prefer to take my time and really work the steel.
I’ve forged up a number of small chisels and punches. Each one does a slightly different thing. To make a single line in the steel, I might do twenty or thirty strikes with the hammer before the line is “just right” to my eye.
Using a selection of chisels and going over the lines several times is what allows me to vary the width and depth like you see here. Each line was carved by the same chisels, but each line is perfectly unique. The end result is a rune carved just for you.