Image 1 of 6
Image 2 of 6
Image 3 of 6
Image 4 of 6
Image 5 of 6
Image 6 of 6
Green and Purple Triquetra Necklace with Green Aventurine and Amethyst
$15.00
Triquetras can represent a number of things. Throughout much of history they have been used to represent the Holy Trinity of the Bible. Wiccans and other modern magical practitioners though use it to represent the the Triple Goddess. There are many goddesses that have a triple form. One that comes to mind is the Goddess of Witches and Crossroads, Mother Hecate. The Triquetra can also represent land, sea, and sky over which Hecate has dominion. The Morrigan is another goddess that is associated with the Triquetra, especially because the Triquetra and The Morrigan share Celtic origins. The Triquetra is also a symbol of protection. The color scheme of this necklace is very playful. I love purple and green together. They lie almost directly across Fr m each other on the color wheel and as a result they make each other pop. The pallette kind of reminds me of building a deck in Magic: The Gathering with Forest and Swamp cards. I love putting together poison decks like that. I think green aventurine and amethyst can each be related to one of those two types. Magic the Gathering's element types are based on the modern magical understanding of "Earth, Fire, Water, Air, and Spirit." Green Aventurine is very earthy. It's powers are related to things people rely on every day, like their wealth and prosperity and the luck that they need to complete most earthly (read: tangible) endeavours. Amethyst would be associated a lot more with the concept of Spirit, or in this instance "swamp" energy. Swamp cards are known for being dark and arcane. Amethyst is known for being tied to wisdom, divination, hidden knowledge, and other supernatural forces. Together they are 2 heavy hitters and bring together our earthly needs with our supernatural desires.
Triquetras can represent a number of things. Throughout much of history they have been used to represent the Holy Trinity of the Bible. Wiccans and other modern magical practitioners though use it to represent the the Triple Goddess. There are many goddesses that have a triple form. One that comes to mind is the Goddess of Witches and Crossroads, Mother Hecate. The Triquetra can also represent land, sea, and sky over which Hecate has dominion. The Morrigan is another goddess that is associated with the Triquetra, especially because the Triquetra and The Morrigan share Celtic origins. The Triquetra is also a symbol of protection. The color scheme of this necklace is very playful. I love purple and green together. They lie almost directly across Fr m each other on the color wheel and as a result they make each other pop. The pallette kind of reminds me of building a deck in Magic: The Gathering with Forest and Swamp cards. I love putting together poison decks like that. I think green aventurine and amethyst can each be related to one of those two types. Magic the Gathering's element types are based on the modern magical understanding of "Earth, Fire, Water, Air, and Spirit." Green Aventurine is very earthy. It's powers are related to things people rely on every day, like their wealth and prosperity and the luck that they need to complete most earthly (read: tangible) endeavours. Amethyst would be associated a lot more with the concept of Spirit, or in this instance "swamp" energy. Swamp cards are known for being dark and arcane. Amethyst is known for being tied to wisdom, divination, hidden knowledge, and other supernatural forces. Together they are 2 heavy hitters and bring together our earthly needs with our supernatural desires.