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Owl Patch – cute patch, bird, sew on patch, animal, forest, gothic patches, witchcraft, woodland, witch familiar, nature punk, occult
Owl patch, based on an antique woodcut illustration.
Owls were traditional one of a witches familiars, they are associated with watchfulness, wisdom and the dead in the western world, but in many culture they are also associate with luck and general good fortune or as harbingers of misfortune. This cute patch looks beautiful styled on a dark mori garment, perfect for nature punks, wiccan and witches.
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Screen printed sew on patch. White on black cotton.
This patch is:
17cm x 14cm – 7″ x 5″ approx
Hand printed and cut
Printed with professional textiles ink and wash safe once ironed**Safe to hand wash. Never machine wash or tumble dry.
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Check out my shop for more insect patches, including a flea, a beetle and dragonfly.
All my patches are printed on quality cotton (the weight of material used for a dress shirt), not canvas. My patches are hand printed and hand cut so expect variations in the cut edges. When I sew on my patches I like a frayed edge but for a neat edge you can fold the edges under when sewing.
Most patches will be folded to post, so just run an iron over it when it arrives!
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Check out my new website www.toothxnail.co.uk for more offers
Or follow me on Instagram @_toothxnail_ for inspiring customer photos and jacket ideas
£4.00 Sold by: ToothxNail -
Vampire & Devil – A5 Art Print Double Feature
One fellow is a Cornish Rumplestiltskin style version of a Devil, who appears in an old Cornish Christmas play or a guise dance called “Duffy and the Devil” originally from the Penwith area, specifically St Buryan.
Also known as drolls, this story involves a girl, called Duffy who is taken in by Squire Lovell of Trove, and set to spinning yarn after claiming she can make the finest stockings. This, however is untrue, and she makes a pact with a Bucca (Cornish meaning: Devil) that he should spin the yarnin return for joining him after three years has passed, unless she can tell him his name upon asking, if she couldn’t, she was his. In a sneaky bid to gain his name she addressed him as “Mister what do I call ‘ee?” To which he cunningly responds “You may call me Captain” from Duffy and the Bucca or Duffy and the Devil.
The other uses his knowledge of scrying to see what the world has in store for him, he did not see his familiar giving him a surprise, and so angry for a little cat
£11.95 Sold by: Tarraway Hoofpress -
Shooting gallery
Acrylic on linen canvas
70×100£800.00£1,000.00Sold by: Captain strobeShooting gallery
£800.00£1,000.00