Dreaming Bread and Skyrie Stanes: Scottish Folk Magic and Community Traditions

Lavender. From Pixabay -- creative commons licence

‘Dreaming Bread and Skyrie Stanes: A Celebration of Scottish Folk Magic and Community Traditions’ is a day-long symposium organised by researcher Scott Richardson-Read, storyteller Amanda Edmiston, and musician Debbie Armour, which will celebrate Scottish folk magic and traditions.

Why you need a bit of folklore in your life. Or feel the folklore fear and do it anyway…

Between St Distaff’s Day 2020 and Twelfth Night 2021, I practiced ritual year folklore every day, my experiences becoming Everyday Folklore: An Almanac for the ritual year, a practical guide on how to engage with folklore all year round.

From The Fool to the World: The History and Folklore of Tarot Cards

This sheet (304 x 217 mm) shows all or part of twenty playing cards, dated c. 1500. It is part of the Cary Collection of playing cards, in the Beinecke Library at Yale. Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=34906134

When you think of tarot cards, do you picture a fortune teller predicting your untimely end in a darkened room? Do you think they’re evil? Thankfully, as you’ll soon discover, the former is unlikely and the latter is simply wrong. Let’s investigate the history and folklore of this much-maligned form of divination.

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