Potion making

CovenSpell Casters ► Potion making
Reply to this post oldest 1 newest Start a new thread

Pages: oldest 1 newest

Potion making
By:
Post # 1
I am relatively new to potion making and was wondering if anyone had any good potion recipes. I want to get into potion making but I can't find much on potions other than the basics of what it is and how it works.
Login or Signup to reply to this post.

Re: Potion making
By: / Novice
Post # 2
Hate to say that's all you need to know, but once you know a potion is basically a liquid spell, you can turn anything into one [cup of tea, soup, lotion, shampoo, perfume, baths, cocktail] Basically, make drinks with intention and they can become potions.

If you're looking for a book, my favourite potion book is Potions, Elixirs and Brews by Anais Alexandre. The first chapter is explaining potions and key ingredients [including magickal properties of stuff like oat milk versus pistachio or what magickal properties various teas have] and the rest is a series of cocktails and drinks [with non-alcoholic substitutes] you can make because that's all potions are; spells utilizing the water element.

Here's a simple seasonal one; pumpkin spice latte. You can make one or order one, but before drinking, hold the cup and charge it with energy. Visualize your desired outcome [prosperity is most common since that's what the energy of the ingredients is working towards] then drink it while thinking about good fortune.

Also, not every potion is meant to be ingested. Baths are meant for you to relax in. Simmer pots fill the room with fragrance. You can enchant perfume, cologne, or body spray and only use it when you need that specific energy. [say you charge a specific bottle with strength, you would use that only when you need strength and confidence]

Hope that helped ^_^
Login or Signup to reply to this post.

Re: Potion making
By:
Post # 3
That helped a lot, Thanks.
Login or Signup to reply to this post.

Reply to this post oldest 1 newest Start a new thread

Pages: oldest 1 newest