Thursday, November 19, 2009

Handfastings in the News

I recently dug up these stories about handfastings, enjoy!

(Not Quite) Out to Pasture: Knocking down walls Not really a story about handfasting but a statement on our unjust marriage laws:

I mean we’ve been a couple for almost eighteen years and the ceremony we had two summers back, a Neo-pagan hand fasting ritual, was really only something we did for ourselves. But I will never give up my opinion that everyone, regardless of sexual orientation, should be allowed to wed if they wish to.


For Heathen's Sake A love story from Maryland...with pictures:
the couple exchange vows in a 20-minute ceremony in an outdoor pavilion that combined Christian rituals -- the unity candle -- with pagan traditions, such as handfasting, an ancient practice in which the couple's wrists are bound with a rope.


Unconventional Wedding The reporter of this piece should be flogged for every bad Halloween pun:
Even conventional weddings can scare the hair off a black cat.

Bridesmaids' gowns tend toward terrifying. Anxious grooms resemble zombies.

And the parents of the bride can turn ghostly pale contemplating the tab.... on Halloween 2009, Roanoke residents ... were married in Fishburn Park in a Pagan and Wiccan handfasting ceremony.



Couple Tie Knot, See U2, Meet Bono only in Vegas...not sure why they put handfasting in quotation marks...but whatever:
...they incorporated some Celtic tradition into the ceremony, specifically "handfasting," where the bride's and groom's wrists are, literally, tied together (thus, the expression, "tying the knot").


...and then there's your standard newspaper wedding announcement I love this part:
...married on June 21, 2009, in an ancient Celtic hand fasting ceremony under a tree that resembled the tree of life...

Monday, November 9, 2009

Recent designs, thoughts and musings

There is something so powerful and yet so soft to this leather. The Lover's Celtic Knot charm at the center is quite popular.

I love the wooden heart-shaped earth at the center of this cord I just added to the store. The base of this cord is a soft, sage-colored cording and it is wrapped with gold and hand-dyed silk trim. I lined the cord with Mother of Pearl gemstone chips.

The Hunter's or Blood moon has continued to dazzle me this month...even as she wanes.


The rains, missing last year, brought needed sustenance to these parched mountains. With the rain, came a vast assortment of mushrooms scattered throughout our newly acquired piece of Earth.



Fall is so beautiful up here in the Appalachian Mountains. The colors are exceptionally vibrant this year, so vibrant they helped to inspire this custom designed cord.