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August 30, 2007

Yankees foul pole squirrel--a sign that Norse gods still exist?

For proof that there's still hope in the job market for comparative lit & religion majors, check out this article in today's New York Times. The subject: the squirrel that climbed up and down the foul pole during Tuesday's Yankees-Red Sox game. Key portions below:

 Images 2007 08 29 Sports Baseball 30Squirrel.190

. . . Believe it or not, the squirrel’s actions closely resembled those of Ratatosk, or “gnawing tooth,” a squirrel in Norse mythology that climbed up and down a tree that represented the world. Snorri Sturluson, an Icelandic scholar and poet, recorded the story in his 13th-century work "Prose Edda."

As the story goes, Ratatosk carried insults as it traveled to opposite ends of the tree, fueling a rivalry between the evil dragon residing at the bottom of the tree and the eagle perched at the top.

“Oh, that’s perfect,” said Roberta Frank, a professor of Old Norse and Old English at Yale University, when told of the squirrel’s antics at the stadium.

Frank was born in the Bronx and is a Yankees fan. She said in a telephone interview yesterday that in the Bronx version of this myth, the Yankees would probably represent the eagle and the rival Red Sox would represent the dragon. The Yankees, after all, are the home team this week, more or less making them the good guys. And if there were a sports team identified with an eagle, it has to be the Yankees, who have begun any number of postseason games with a visit from Challenger, the bald eagle who swoops in from center field.

But being the eagle is not such a good thing, Frank noted.

“The dragon will destroy the world in Norse mythology,” she said, adding that the eagle would be on the losing end of a battle that was only made worse by the malicious squirrel.

Rasta millennium countdown clock widget

 Downloads Dashboard Justforfun Images Rastamillenniumcountdownclock 20070823140909

High times for your Mac Dashboard:

This 100% Hemp graphic clock counts down the days, hours, minutes, and seconds until the end of the second millennium.

The Rastafarians calendar is some seven years behind the Roman calendar.

And No, it’s not because of any short-term memory loss problems.

August 29, 2007

Old light, new light


light_1440x900, originally uploaded by C28dotCom.

This is a screensaver distributed by Christian mall-ternative C28. Note the juxtaposition of old nautical tech--the lighthouse--with contemporary urban architecture.

August 28, 2007

Ratemyturban.com

 Files Photo Photo-532812

And if you want to add your own picture to the site, check out Sikhnet's instructional videos on tying turbans.

Vodou Brooklyn

A must-see (and must-listen) slideshow documents Haitian ritual in New York.

August 27, 2007

The tao of Payless

 Brandnew Archives Payless Logo

Payless has a new logo. Look familiar?

Click here for another variant on the yin-yang symbol from the Good Karma Cafe.

Fashion fatwa? Malaysia tells Beyonce to cover up in concert

From the Times of India:

R&B singer Beyonce Knowles has been asked to cover herself when she performs in Malaysia this year in November.

Organizers have taken the decision keeping in mind the furious students of the Muslim country who threatened to boycott a concert performed by artist Gwen Stefani because of her indecent reputation.

"We've informed Beyonce's management about this issue of clothes, but it takes some of the fun out of it," Contactmusic quoted, Razlan Ahmad Razali, the chairman of Pineapple Concerts, as saying.

. . .

"She's a fashion icon, and we know that she often wears miniskirts and clothes that expose her navel during her performances. It's a pity to restrict her, because her costumes are all tasteful and glamorous," Razali said.

August 26, 2007

LA Ink: Born as Ghosts skull and Circle of Life dragon tattoos

Re-broadcast on Sunday night (and no doubt many times to come), the first episode of the new season of Miami LA Ink features several tattoos with spiritual roots. Here are two.

First, Eric Balfour's skull tattoo drawn from the Mexican folk art:

 Files 2007 08 Ep1-2

 Mex  Travel Mjmendoza Calavera-1

And below, the Ouroboros tattoo, patterned after the symbol described on the show as the circle-of-life-dragon-eating-its-tail:

 Wikipedia Commons F Fa Ouroboros

 Files 2007 08 Ep1-5

Art and faith in Santa Fe

An engaging multi-faith exploration of the relation between art and higher meaning, available here.

Hilary Clinton and the Pentagram earring conspiracy

Via AltReligion, here's an article explaining how pentagram earrings in an Alltel ad are point to a murderous occult conspiracy involving Hillary Clinton.

Of course, if she becomes president, Hillary won't be the first secret satanist in the White House!

Religious literacy on ice

Today's New York Times Magazine has a feature highlighting the famed ice Buddha sculpture at Megu, a local restaurant. The accompanying photo:

26Food600.1

Ummmmm . . .

August 20, 2007

The Jedi Last Supper

 

jedi-last-supper.jpg

 

The ultimate mashup of Christianity and Star Wars, via Transbuddha

August 19, 2007

Jewelry, clothing, hairstyle lead to ostracism from community of Latter Day polygamists

The polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints has received a fair bit of attention in recent years, not least of all from the law, but this article provides insight into the link between sectarian identity and style:

Until recently, the community, although different by many people's standards, lived, worked and worshiped together as a whole. The FLDS church, which claims polygamy as one of its tenets, is not affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which denounced polygamy in 1890.

Yet changes in church leadership brought about changes in the community and many, reportedly judged unworthy in the eyes of Jeffs, were told to leave.

In a sense those - especially the young people - who either choose or are told to leave, are caught between two worlds and struggle when forced to adapt to life outside of Hildale and Colorado City.

Born and raised in Hildale, Lacey's parents separated when she was 7. Her mother left the community and lived in St. George and Salt Lake City.

Lacey shuttled back and forth through the invisible barrier that separates the rest of the world from the two cities that straddle the Utah and Arizona borders.

She had trouble fitting in when she was in Hildale because she wore pants, bangs, jewelry - all frowned upon by the FLDS community - and shunned the traditional braided hairdos that most of the women in the twin cities of Hildale and Colorado City wear. . . .

Red was a color not worn by members of the FLDS religion and some symbols were frowned upon.

Clothing with any type of writing or logos was forbidden and Kevin said even as time went on, the long-sleeved shirts the men and boys wore turned more to solid color, button-down shirts, eliminating polo pullovers and stripes. . . .

And just in case the community seems completely alien, here's a small reminder that its members are indeed all too human:

Kevin said one of the reasons he left was because he was afraid of getting "assigned" a wife.

"My first fear was I would get married to an ugly girl," Kevin said.

August 18, 2007

Kabbalah Red String Barbie


Kabbalah Red String Necklace, originally uploaded by MarieLynn.

Proof that sometimes a religion can get too trendy.

Mac OSX Islamic prayer time Dashboard widgets

 Downloads Dashboard Reference Images Prayertimes 20070608165601

One of the many fun yet useful design feature of the Mac is the Dashboard, which displays application widgets that can do, well, just about anything. Pictured above: one of a couple user-designed Islamic Dashboard widgets displaying prayer times.

And yes, it has an option to sound the Athan, the distinctive call to prayer!

August 16, 2007

A prayer for Phil Rizzuto

New York City has been mourning the loss of Phil Rizzuto, legendary Hall of Fame baseball player and long-time announcer for the New York Yankees. Before the game played the night he died, the Yankees held a brief but intense memorial service, replete with an Ave Maria and moment of silence that were as any church service.

Here are a couple of Rizzuto's own impromptu hymns, from O Holy Cow!, a book of "found poetry" collecting comments Rizzuto made while announcing Yankees games. The occasion: the tragic death of Yankees' captain Thurman Munson in a plane crash.

Prayer for the Captain

There's a little prayer I always say
Whenever I think of my family or when I'm flying,
When I'm afraid, and I am afraid of flying.
It's just a little one. You can say it no matter what,
Whether you're Catholic or Jewish or Protestant or
whatever.
And I've probably said it a thousand times
Since I heard the news on Thurman Munson.

It's not trying to be maudlin or anything.
His Eminence, Cardinal Cooke, is going to come out
And say a little prayer for Thurman Munson.
But this is just a little one I say time and time again,
It's just: Angel of God, Thurman's guardian dear,
To whom his love commits him here there or everywhere,
Ever this night and day be at his side,
To light and guard, to rule and guide.

For some reason it makes me feel like I'm talking to
Thurman,
Or whoever's name you put in there,
Whether it be my wife or any of my children, my parents
or anything.
It's just something to keep you really from going bananas.
Because if you let this,
If you keep thinking about what happened, and you can't
understand it,
That's what really drives you to despair.

Faith. You gotta have faith.
You know, they say time heals all wounds,
And I don't quite agree with that a hundred percent.
It gets you to cope with wounds.
You carry them the rest of your life.

August 3, 1979
Baltimore at New York
Pregame show

The Man in the Moon

The Yankees have had a traumatic four days.
Actually five days.
That terrible crash with Thurman Munson.
To go through all that agony,
And then today,
You and I along with the rest of the team
Flew to Canton for the services,
And the family....

Very upset.

You know, it might,
It might sound corny.
But we have the most beautiful full moon tonight.
And the crowd,
Enjoying whatever is going on right now.
They say it might sound corny,
But to me it's some kind of a,
Like an omen.

Both the moon and Thurman Munson,
Both ascending up into heaven.
I just can't get it out of my mind.
I just saw that full moon,
And it just reminded me of Thurman.
And that's it.

August 6, 1979
Baltimore at New York
Ron Guidry pitching to Lee May
Fifth inning, bases empty, no outs
Orioles lead 1-0

Street art fest with silver cross

Trentonfest

The Tantric Gospel of the American Journalist

Terms such as "evangelist" and "evangelical" derive from the Greek verb "euangelizo," commonly translated along the lines of "to announce good news." The concept of news here isn't a reference to journalism per se, but judging from the following internal memo from the Executive Editor of the Seattle Times news might have a spiritual significance beyond the religion beat. The occasion: dressing down reporters who cheered the resignation of Karl Rove:

I ask you all to leave your personal politics at the front door for one simple reason: A good newsroom is a sacred and magical place in which we can and should test every assumption, challenge each other's thinking, ask the fundamental questions those in power hope we will overlook.

Of course, this might just be a colossal ruse to get the newspaper to fund training in appreciation for, um, multiple positions at San Francisco's Sacred Space Institute!

Chastity rings, law and the hijab

Mary Ann Sorrentino, columnist and former Planned Parenthood director, writes this week on recent legal developments pertaining to the prohibition of chastity rings and the hijab in school.  She raises a key point:

Lydia Playfoot, a 16-year-old English student, regrets that London’s High Court rejected her request to wear a Christian “virginity ring” to school. Playfoot sees the ring as a religious symbol, representing her commitment to virginity before marriage. The High Court said the ring is not a religious symbol, but jewelry, which the school forbids for all students. . . .

Celibacy isn’t easy, especially for teens with raging hormones in their bodies and peer pressure pushing from the outside. I’m not sure all the rings and balls in the world can compete with young love and lust. I am happy to cheer for those who try to resist and also to be there to catch them if they fall.
 
But this virginity sideshow pales alongside bans on serious religious garb mandated by whatever holy texts wearers hold dear. It is worrisome that some courts are missing the same fine distinction that the British High Court, in its wisdom, made in the Playfoot case.

August 15, 2007

Sienna Miller meets the Catholic hierarchy in Rome

sienna_miller.jpg

Old and new worlds of fashion collide in the upcoming September Vogue.

August 14, 2007

The Iraqi sniper bullet and the camoflage Bible

Many a sermon has told the old saw about the Bible in the breast pocket that saved a man's life by stopping a bullet--so much so that Woody Allen had this classic riff on it in his standup routine:

Years ago, my mother gave me a bullet...a bullet, and I put it in my breast pocket. Two years after that, I was walking down the street, when a berserk evangelist heaved a Gideon bible out a hotel room window, hitting me in the chest. Bible would have gone through my heart if it wasn't for the bullet.

Apparently the real deal just happened for real in Iraq, complete with the soldier having promised his mother to put the Bible there:

PFC Brendan Schweigart was helping to retrieve a tank in Iraq when he felt as if he had been hit with a sledge hammer.

It was deadly fire from an enemy sniper.

But this day called up a miracle for the young soldier who believes in God and the teachings of the Bible.

According to a report by NBC affiliate WGRZ, the bullet missed Schweigart's vital organs because over his heart was a Bible.

Scott says it's the one he got at boot camp. The Bible acted as a shield, that trapped the bullet. He had promised his mother that he would always carry his Bible into battle.

 200708131704

Perhaps it was one of these. (HT: Jennifer Rose Emick)

Pentagram-wearing Satanist converts to God while on trial for murder

Hot off the press:

''What 19-year-old doesn't have some type of skulls?'' said [Lazaro] Galindo, who is defending himself.

He showed the jury a picture police took of his home and said the skulls in the picture were just plastic toys.

Up until last week, Galindo said he was a Satanist and even insisted on his constitutional right to wear his religious garb -- a special cap and pentagram jewelry -- in court.

On Monday, he announced that he had found God and no longer needed the special clothes. He abandoned his plan to keep his Satanic Bible on the defense table during the trial.

''At no time in this case will you hear that I said I kill for Satan,'' he told the jury.

August 12, 2007

"Lutheran pride!"--Christian symbol ring

As an antidote to yesterday's Christian ninja sword, here's a non-violent symbol ring from Old Lutheran, which we gather is a bit less divisive than young Luther.

Silver Symbolring 300
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Christian ninja sword

OK, this is scary:

August 11, 2007

Lapus lazuli

Lapus

What is it? Click here.

August 10, 2007

The GodTube minstrel show

GodTube is a Christian YouTube knockoff chock full of home-brewed evangelical content. Traffic patterns may seem a bit familiar--you got

But what Christian video site would be complete without the requisite group of white boys acting stereotypically urban? They're in Hizzous, homes, and they're dope, yo yo yo.

Blah.

Anyway, check out "Bling My Youthleader" below. And when you're done, be sure to watch the Edinburgh Fringe parody Christian Rock is Cool. On YouTube.

For women only

In keeping with "biblical family and gender roles," Southwestern Baptist Seminary in Texas will "offer a new academic program in homemaking--basically, classes in cooking, sewing and child-rearing"--for women only.

I wonder what the school would make of this loving Christian couple.

Silver, faith and fetish culture

Padung

There's a new silver exhibit in Phoenix. One of the featured items: the Sumatran padung earpiece, which, when adjusted up or down, indicates a woman's marital status. Why would this jewelry have such an association, and not, say, a wedding ring?. As you can see from the following replica available at murnis.com, Its double spirals symbolize . . . um . . . the rod-like extension connotes . . .

Padung-1

Anyway, we're dealing with a family-friendly museum here, so let's move along now, shall we? Here's museum director Katie Anderson talking about the exhibit's religious significance:

And while sorority girls everywhere clamor for the silver Return to Tiffany necklace and bracelets, other cultures create fertility symbols with the precious metal. Known as fetishes, these objects vary in symbolism and meaning from culture to culture. It's religious iconography through jewelry, Anderson says: "Each culture's silver can tell us about the people who made them and who wore them."

Plus ca change . . .

August 09, 2007

Stealing *what* from church to make jewelry?

Usually when you read about a church theft the objects in question are sacred--altar fixtures, donations, innocence . . . (I kid, I kid!). But that's not what thieves stole a couple a couple days ago from an Episcopal church in Atlanta, where thieves stole the catalytic converters from three church vans and a bus.

Why a catalytic converter? For a moment my thoughts drifted toward the metaphorical, with embittered ex-Christians plotting the theft to keep the pastor from, well, catalyzing conversions. But it turns out that this explanation does not survive Ockham's razor. As this news article explains, catalytic converters contain platinum, making them useful to be harvested for dentistry and jewelry.

Thus endeth the lesson.

Virgin on the half shell

What would you do if someone told you they saw an image of the Virgin Mary on a turtle shell necklace--and it brought them serious cash? If you're a priest in San Diego, you may want to come up with a response, like, now, because you've about to get hit up for some advice:

Call it luck or call it a miracle -- either way, ever since Jackie Seiler noticed the image of the Virgin Mary on a Hawaiian necklace she sells in her clothing shop, business has been good.

As the 73-year-old National City shop owner tried hawking a turtle necklace last month, a mother who was looking for a trinket for her daughter waived it off as too large. Seiler, who owns Hawaiian Clothing, took a closer look at the adornment and became baffled.

"Is that what I think it is?" she said to the customer.

Upon closer inspection, Seiler made out the small image resembling Our Lady of Guadalupe. A head, a halo, the shroud and the collar are depicted on a small shell affixed the body of the turtle. Coloring on the shell looks as though rays of light are shining on the image.

"The same day I found it I had a $1,000 sale," Seiler said adding the figure was unusual since her highest sale at her Transportation Avenue location was $300 in one day. Sales continue to average more than $500 a day.

"I'm going to take it to a church and ask the priest what I should do with it," she said.

Too bad it wasn't an image of the late Pope John Paul II--sounds like the Vatican could use an extra miracle or two.

Thanks again to the invaluable Alt Religion for the tip!

August 08, 2007

What Wouldn't Jesus Do? whiskey flask


What Wouldn't Jesus Do?, originally uploaded by WebWideJosh.

In the age of mash-ups and mass globalization, the appropriation of religious imagery has become an increasingly controversial act. For more on the subject, check out this recent article on Madi-Zen Avenue Marketing and Susan Scafidi's Who Owns Culture?

August 07, 2007

White dress "voodoo" sparks dismissal of NYC principal

Breaking news in the New York Post:  reports that the New York City Dept. of Education is about to fire a New York City principal who allegedly forced staff to participate a Santeria ritual cleansing of their school.  What actually happened isn't clear--the priest accused of leading the ceremony denies practicing Santeria and the principal denies the whole thing, but the staff members themselves tell a far different story in considerable detail:

A former assistant principal, Melody Crooks-Simpson, said there was a running joke at the school that sage should be used to cleanse the building because many of the students were ill-behaved. But it seems Tamayo took it seriously, Crooks-Simpson told investigators, and had Fonte lead a ceremony at which she sprinkled chicken blood on the building.

Crooks-Simpson told investigators she didn't attend that ceremony but showed up to school a few days later in a white dress to participate in another ceremony because Tamayo said it wouldn't work without her. She said she was charged $900 by Tamayo for the rite.

Another teacher saw Tamayo, Fonte and another woman, wearing white dresses, performing a ritual at the school while Fonte balanced a silver tray with 40 lit candles on her head, said investigators, who were tipped in February by an anonymous caller who accused Tamayo of misconduct.

Bikini triquetra tattoo


IMG_4639, originally uploaded by Sweet Samantha.

Speaking of swimwear and religion, here is a sunny triquetra tattoo.

Of burqas and bikinis

Religiousswim

Jesus said that the disciple of the kingdom of heaven "brings new and old things out of storage" (Matt 13:52)--and in regard to women's fashion, ain't that the truth? Faith Central has a nice rundown on modest women's swimwear from Christian and Muslim vendors--it's new, but oh so old.

Pictured below: Bill Norton, the bathing beach policeman of Washington, D.C., in 1922 enforcing a regulation prohibiting a woman's bathing suit from stopping more than six inches above the knee.

Suitpolice

August 06, 2007

Thoth Egyptian God plush doll

For everything you need to know about the feast of Thoth (unless you're an Egyptologist, I guess), click here.

Thoth Prod

Wearing a hijab violates Islamic law?

According to this Christian critic, yes. This assertion isn't a surprise if your familiar with Christian apologetics, in which one common strategy is to expose your opponent's self-contradictions. Evolutionists are quoted against each other or themselves; the historical peccadilloes of the Latter Day Saints stand against the Mormons' modern family-friendly rhetoric; Islam is divided against itself.

Beyond this underlying strategy, the article also attempts to expose Islam as anti-woman, citing evidence that includes an alleged prohibition of jewelry. Christianity, the author claims, holds to a different standard:

In Christianity men are taught to lower their looks while passing by a woman to show respect and to open the door for any female to let her pass first through the open door.

You learn something new every day.

World's largest turban?

Turbanbig-1

Read more on Sikh headwear at Faith Central.

Religious t-shirt intifada

Intifadanyc

Religious t-shirts on the rise, says the author of a recent commentary in the fashion news site Fibre2Fashion. He should know--the author, Wain Roy, is a marketer whose work includes such sites as JesusBranded, a ministry that sells Jesus-logoed items as a means of spreading the faith. The success of sites like JesusBranded is further evidence of the blurring of the line between consumerism, commerce and faith. Critics may see this as selling out, but believers who buy into it see it more as transforming the culture than conformity.

Speaking of t-shirts and uprising, pictured above is a t-shirt that is causing quite a stir in New York City: the Intifada NYC shirt sold by Arab Women Active in Art and Media. The word "Intifada" means "uprising" and has long been associated with the Palestinian resistance against Israel. Further causing controversy: one of the people loosely--and I mean loosely, in the sense of being part of a group that shares office space with AWAAM--is the principal of a new NYC school that has already sparked an uproar with its planned curriculum in Middle Eastern studies.

Is AWAAM encouraging girls to don ski masks and gun down their playmates or is it, as I suspect, being provocative in an artistic kulturkampf? Check out their website and decide for yourself!

August 05, 2007

The real Muslim housewives of Orange County

This is a photo from a bazaar held by the Islamic Institute of Orange County, California.

If the meaning of the picture's title isn't clear, note that the word "Ummah" is typically translated as "community" and the reference here isn't to springs as in bouncy wire, but spring as in source of water.

August 03, 2007

DefCon Jesus Phreak t-shirts

Today's story of the web is the undercover reported at the latest DefCon, a hackers convention. But that's far from the only interesting thing there. Check out the Church of WiFi, whose playful name and fun commandments also reflect a deep organic connection between electronic networks and spiritual identity. You might also want to look for the Christian hackers known as Jesus Phreaks (or Phreakers), who have been known to be there selling t-shirts.

Jesus-Phreakers

Hindu keychain

This keychain features an icon from a temple procession in India. Click here for a more complete description of this keychain, said to bring good luck. For only $2.95, that's a bargain for the luck alone.

Arulmigu Keychain

Bahai temple builders tell all!

OK, so this article about developer Soheil Mosun, Ltd., isn't actually all that salacious, but it does provide an instructive look at the folks who built the Baha'i Temple for South America, as well as a couple of mosques and a Jewish memorial:

In essence, the firm makes jewellery for high-end developments. It's the "bling" in buildings.

August 02, 2007

Blingdom Pepsi tattoo video

The UK division of Pepsi has launched a creative mashup video campaign in which individuals can customize a video. The hook: it's of a girl getting your name tattooed. Always game to see the latest in pop culture (and iconic tattoos) I gave it a go in the name of this site. Click here for the video and be sure to watch through to the very end--turns out the BofG is the punchline of the campaign!

History, religion and the August birthstone

Cluny Grey is a jewelry designer who writes the always engaging Jewelry Blog, and today she features not own designs incorporating peridot, the August birthstone. Along with the pics: a historical overview that includes such information as . . .

Peridot has an interesting pedigree; many people believe that Aaron's breastplate (in the Bible) had peridot although it was referred to as "topaz".

Click here for the whole thing.

Kanye West vs. bling

Kanye West has provided a good bit of material here at the BofG, and today he provides a nice addendum to this morning's painfully hip video on King Solomon Bling. From today's Page Six:

IF you use the word "bling" these days, you're unhip and totally out of style, according to Kanye West. The hip-hop star tells Complex magazine: "Only white people and older black people say 'bling' now. If a white person uses slang too early, then that makes them look like a wigger. But if black people use slang too late, then it makes them look like a wigger." Thanks for straightening us out!

Word.

"King Bling:" when pastors try too hard

One of my favorite scenes from the movie Saved! is Pastor Skip's initial entrance at the Christian school youth assembly.  He runs in, does a flip and tries as best he can to sound like a teen-ager.  

As the Simpsons' saying goes, it's funny 'cuz it's true.  Below: a real-life pastor tries to make the book of Proverbs sound, well, as you'll see it's a bit of a weird hybrid of surburban Christianity and affected urban style.

August 01, 2007

Flatland

I've often heard it said that religion adds a new dimension to life. Here it subtracts one:
Rotating 2-D shows featuring nature-, spiritual- or religious-based art for exhibit and sale to the public are displayed at First Presbyterian Church, 300 E. Grand River Ave., Brighton.

True camfessions

Camfess.com is a new site for video confessions. Unlike its more famous predecessor, PostSecret, Camfess attempts to leverage the historic link between confessing and religion, from its logo

Camfess

to its marketing material

"The act of confession - widely encouraged by religion and psychology alike — makes people better."

to anonymizing:

Neopagan Lammas jewelry

Alchemille's Secret Garden has a round-up of products appropriate for today's celebration of Lammas, a neopagan festival rooted in worship of the corn god. Among them: her own MAIZE jewelry, available on Etsy.com.

Maize Risingstone Etsycom
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Prayer beads to Cernunnos


Prayer beads to Cernunnos, originally uploaded by eydimork.

Today's Alt Religion features the horned Celtic deity Cernunnos--who just happens to be featured on this creative hand-crafted rosary.

Divine string theory


MofPearl, originally uploaded by divinestringtheory.

Whether as art, design, or an object for personal meditation, rosary beads have been on the cultural upswing. If you like looking at--or buying--hand-crafted rosaries, be sure to check out this new photostream by Flickr's Divine String Theory.