Dare to wear the watcher in the rocks. In the legends of the Shoshone and neighboring tribes, Tos'Apittse is the stone spirit of the mountain — a silent protector who...
Dare to wear the legend. In the vast mesas and stone plateaus of Shoshone and Ute lands, an ancient figure roams — the Tso'Apittse, also known as the Giant of...
Dare to wear the legend. Before there was land, there was water. And from that water rose the back of a great turtle — carrying earth, sky, and life itself....
Dare to wear the land we walk on. In creation stories shared by many Indigenous nations, including the Haudenosaunee, Lenape, and Anishinaabe, the world as we know it began on...
Dare to wear the legend. Sleek. Powerful. Dangerous. The Water Panther — also known as Mishipeshu — is a sacred and feared creature from the legends of the Anishinaabe, Ojibwe,...
Dare to wear the guardian of the deep. In the lore of the Anishinaabe, Shawnee, Myaamia, and many other Great Lakes tribes, the Water Panther is no ordinary creature —...
Dare to wear the hunger that never ends. In the forests of the Algonquian-speaking tribes, the name Wendigo is spoken with fear and caution. This terrifying creature is born from...
Dare to wear the legend. The enemy is hunger — not for food, but for power, greed, and the soul. Wetiko (also spelled Wendigo, Witiko, or Wihtikow) is a cannibalistic...
Dare to wear the spirit of insatiable hunger. In the stories of the Algonquian-speaking tribes, Wetiko (also spelled Wendigo or Witiko) is more than just a monster — it’s a...