Divine Portals

Materials: Cotton, embroidery floss, MX dye, avocado pit dye, wood, paint, and metal garter clips.

The Subtle Pathways of Perception

Materials: Cotton, rope, embroidery floss, copper, beads, elastic, yarn, wood, paint, and foam.

Underworld Glimmers (for Hecate)

Materials: Cotton, thread, rope, yarn, embroidery floss, rose quartz, wood, beads, paint, paracord, and vintage skeleton key.

Mythical Fruit (for Persephone)

Materials: Hand-smocked cotton, avocado dye, grommets, rope, corset boning, rug mesh, wood, and paint.

The Left-Hand Path in Tantra and witchcraft has long been cast as transgressive, a journey through the shadowlands of the forbidden, but to walk it is to step beyond inherited limits and into a space where intimacy—both with ourselves and the world—can be reimagined. Historically, its taboos have stemmed from fear: of bodily sovereignty, of pleasure as liberation, of knowledge that does not bow to dominant culture. Yet, rather than nihilism or chaos, this path offers an ethics of radical presence, where the boundaries between self and others—sacred and temporal—dissolve into something more fluid, more electric. In Tantra, the Left-Hand Path embraces practices that refuse purity, engaging with desire, decay, and embodiment as sites of transformation. In witchcraft, it is the path of the heretic and the hedge-crosser, the one who knows that real magic is relational, woven through intentional acts of care, whispered spells of resistance, and a way of engaging with the world through reverence and wonder. To take this path is to break the spell of separation and move through the world with a touch that is both tender and unbounded. Enchantment is not an escape but a deep entanglement—a recognition that we are, and have always been, part of the sacred fabric of everything.

Special thanks to David Hale.

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Dolly