the power of Viking SorcerY

The Wisdom of the Wanderer

Leave. Wander. Learn how others live, think, fear, and love.

Wanderers Scarf
Sale Price: $30.00 Original Price: $60.00

This is not just something you wear. This is something that wears you, slowly, over long roads and quiet awakenings. The Wanderer’s Scarf is stitched with story — old Icelandic sorcery and Norse myth folded into fabric, waiting to be unfolded again by wind, by eyes, by use.

The scarf is roughly 72 inches long and 28 wide.

At its center is Yggdrasil, the World Tree, whose roots dig into forgotten places and whose branches brush the sky. The old stories say it holds the nine realms together, but who’s counting? It’s the axis of everything. And it grows here, on cloth, as though to whisper: everything is connected, and nothing is still.

On either side: the Helms of Awe, also called Ægishjálmur — protection symbols from the grimoires of Iceland. These weren’t just drawn, they were believed. Pressed between the brows, they were said to cloud the minds of enemies and steady the hearts of those who wore them. Magic for the brow, for the bones, for the will.

In each corner waits the Greater Shield of Terror. Its spell is stranger. You were to draw it in raven bile on black paper and leave it in a raven’s nest until the eggs hatched. Only then would it be ready. And when held before you in danger, it would make your enemies see black dragons — not metaphorical ones. Real enough to make them run.

Threaded around the edges, slipping between borders and corners, is a serpent. Not just any serpent — Jörmungandr, the Midgard Serpent, who circles the world and swallows its tail. A creature too large for any map. When it moves, the oceans stir. When it stops, the gods worry. It belongs here, watching.

The rest is detail — Icelandic flower patterns, carved into looms from old days. Runes and shapes that once hung over cradles or were sewn into the hems of burial shrouds. And yes, as in all true sorcery, there are hidden staves, tucked into the design like whispers. Some for protection. Some for remembering. One or two that don’t want to be named.

Along the top and bottom runs a verse from the Hávamál, Odin’s book of wisdom, written in sorcerer’s script:

Sá einn veit
er víða ratar
ok hefr fjölð um farit,
hverju geði
stýrir gumna hverr,
sá er vitandi er vits.

“He alone knows, who has wandered far and wide,
who has travelled many paths,
what mind steers the heart of another —
only the wise
can understand the minds of men.”

This scarf is for the ones who do not walk the straight path. The ones who listen between words. Who cross rivers without bridges. Who go looking — and who know that being found is something altogether different.

Wanderer’s Scarf – A Roadward Spell in Cloth

  1. Yggdrasill (World Tree) — the living axis of the Nine Realms, its roots and branches woven through the design as a reminder to travel widely yet stay rooted.

  2. Wayfinder (Vegvísir) — the classic Icelandic “way sign,” included to help the wearer find their path through storms, fog, and unfamiliar roads.

  3. Helm of Awe (Ægishjálmur) — a traditional protective sigil for courage and presence, set to anchor the scarf’s protective intent.

  4. Hávamál Stanza — the traveler’s wisdom inscribed on-cloth:
    “Sá einn veit er víða ratar ok hefr fjölð um farit, hverju geði stýrir gumna hverr, sá er vitandi er vits.”
    “He alone knows, who has wandered far and wide, who has travelled many paths, what mind steers the heart of another — only the wise can understand the minds of men.”

  5. Protection-from-Sorcery Stave — a traditional galdrastafur motif intended to ward off harmful workings and ill intent.

  6. Greater Shield of Terror — a bolder, amplifying shield-form used historically to project strength and deter hostility.

  7. Old & Beautiful Helm of Terror — an antique variation of the Helm, rendered with aged line-work to honor older manuscript styles.

  8. Protective Stave Against Hatred & Evil Thoughts — a calming counter-charm pattern to quiet malice, envy, and intrusive negativity around the wearer.

  9. Icelandic Flora — Fjallagrös — the hardy Iceland moss (fjallagrös) worked into the border, a nod to resilience and the stark beauty of the highlands.

  10. Midgard Serpent (Jörmungandr) — the world-encircling serpent stitched as a subtle ring through the composition, a reminder that every journey is part of a larger circle.

Wayfinder
from $12.00

Carry the old northern magic wherever you roam. The Wayfinder bears the Vegvísir — an Icelandic symbol said to keep wanderers from losing their way, even in storm or shadow. Whether worn close to your heart as a steel-and-leather necklace, clipped to your keys, sewn onto your jacket, or hung by its chain as a protective ward over doorways or beds, this piece channels direction, clarity, and the quiet power of ancient guidance.

Crafted in steel and made to endure, each form of the Wayfinder is a reminder: when you carry your own compass, you are never truly lost.

Helm Of Awe
$20.00

Helm of Awe – Protection Carved in Steel

This is not a symbol. It's a warning.

The Helm of AweÆgishjálmur in the old tongue — is one of the most feared and revered magical staves in Icelandic tradition. Warriors painted it on their foreheads before battle. Sorcerers etched it on lead and pressed it to the brow. Its purpose: to protect and to make others fear. Not with noise — with presence.

Each piece is hand-forged in Icelandic steel, crafted by the sorcerer during the long dark nights of the north. You can wear it or carry it — but either way, it is not decoration. It is defense.

Available as:
Necklace with a black leather strap (1mm thick for weight and substance)
 • Choose from two sizes: 40mm (1.57 inches) or 60mm (2.36 inches)
Magnet – heavy steel, made to keep watch over your space

The Helm is not meant to sparkle. It is meant to steady you when the storm breaks. To remind you, quietly, that you are not to be crossed.

And yes — if worn over the heart, it knows how to listen.

Old Norse (Icelandic) Modern English
Sá einn veit The one who has traveled far and wide,
er víða ratar and wandered through many lands,
ok hefr fjölð um farit, knows how each person thinks and feels —
hverju geði only the wise
stýrir gumna hverr, can understand the minds of others.
sá er vitandi er vits.  

This verse doesn’t just whisper advice — it dares you.

  • Leave.

  • Wander.

  • Learn how others live, think, fear, and love.

Only then can your magic stretch across borders and reach into the deeper mysteries of life.
So take up your stave, pack your satchel, and walk. The world is wide, and it’s waiting to teach you things no book ever will.

Go Forth and Know

In the age of sagas, it wasn’t the ones who stayed home that were called wise. It was the ones with sand in their boots, wind in their hair, and a hundred tales folded into the lines of their face. This is how wisdom was earned — not in silence, but in motion.

Travel is not just a pleasure, it’s a spell in motion.

To move through the world is to gather the souls of places — to listen to the laughter in a distant tavern, to read the sorrow behind a stranger’s eyes, to feel the pulse of the earth under foreign stars. Only by stepping beyond your threshold can you ever hope to understand the vastness of human hearts.

Ancient Rites

Are you ready to step into the realm of mysticism? Share your details below and let the magic begin! We eagerly await your mystical summons!