Dare to wear the reminder that beauty fades, but spirit lasts. In Iroquois and Haudenosaunee tradition, the No-Face Doll teaches humility, selflessness, and purpose. Originally created as a beautiful doll...
Dare to wear the legend. She walks barefoot through the fields, and from her footsteps, life grows. In Cheyenne tradition and other Plains cultures, The Old Woman Who Never Dies...
Dare to wear the one who walks with life in every step. In Cheyenne legend, The Old Woman Who Never Dies is the Earth’s eternal guardian — the Corn Mother,...
Dare to wear the legend. In the remote wilds of Alaska’s Kuskokwim River region, they whisper of a creature with wings like silence and eyes like death. The Owl Man...
Dare to wear the watcher in the trees. Told in the stories of Alaska Native tribes, especially near the Kuskokwim River, the Owl Man is a mysterious figure seen only...
Dare to wear the legend. She flies by night, heartless and hollow — the Stikini, known in Seminole and Creek legend as the Owl Witch, is no ordinary shapeshifter. Said...
Dare to wear the witch that flies by night. In the deep-rooted stories of the Seminole and other Southeastern tribes, the Stikini is feared and whispered about — a witch...
Dare to wear the legend. Beneath still waters waits a wrath you can’t outrun. In the lore of the Modoc and Klamath people, The River Serpent guarded Crater Lake —...
Dare to wear the force that guards the depths. From the sacred waters of Crater Lake in the stories of the Modoc and Klamath peoples comes the legend of the...