This is not a symbol. It's a warning.
The Helm of Awe — Ægishjálmur 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.
This is not a symbol. It's a warning.
The Helm of Awe — Ægishjálmur 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.