Welcome I'm moonlitowleyes or else for short call me owleyes. I live in New Zealand, and I'm proud to be kiwi. I love world of warcraft and mostly draw characters from it, my fav food would be the the good old sandwich and noodles. And I don't do digital art, maybe until I get a tablet. And my fav hobby would be playing wow, drawing and listening to music.
Im still young and at school. So I find I have enough time to think what my job might be when I am older. One thing I was thinking of working in Weta workshop.
I have another account named clockworkvalley
And I have an account of emerald activities named moonara (you should all check it out it's pretty fun.
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A spell to see fairies (I found this on a website named child of danu)
Apparently all the fairies left these isles during the 17th century in protest of the anti-Christmas, anti-fun policies of that much loved king-who-wasn’t-a-king, Oliver Cromwell. I never realised the wee folk were Christians, but there you go. Anyway, if you ever wanted to see some Sidhe for yourself try this little enchantment which I found in an old children’s book. It’s sourced from an ancient manuscript and supposedly used to work. So if you give it a go and your sight remains fairyless, then you’ll know the rumors were true.
1. Gather the flowers of roses and marigolds while looking toward the east. Take the petals and soak them separately in spring water for one week. Stain off the petals.
2. Pour a small quantity of each liquid into a crystal glass bowl.
3. Add some virgin olive oil, and beat the mixture until the oil turns white. Then pour it into a glass bottle.
4. Add hollyhock buds, marigold flowers, young hazel buds and the flowers of wild thyme to the mixture. The thyme should be gathered from the side of a hill ‘where fairies used to go often’.
5. Add grass from a fairy throne and leave the bottle in the sun for three days for the ingredients to dissolve.
6. Rub a very little of the mixture on each eyelid and you will be able to see any fairies who are around.
There you have it. Something to do next weekend, and heaps safer than the usual methods of seeing fairies. Just don’t tell anyone what you’re up to unless you fancy being chased across the fields with a butterfly net!