Dare to wear the legend. Small. Silent. Watching. In Inuit and Alaskan Native lore, Ishigaq (also known as Ishigaqtuq) are mysterious little people said to live among the rocks and...
Dare to wear the spirit that leads without sound. In the Inuit and Alaska Native traditions, the Ishigaq is a spirit guide — often invisible, but known to leave behind...
Dare to wear the legend. He comes with music. With laughter. With life. Kokopelli, the humpbacked flute player, is one of the most iconic figures in Southwestern Native tradition —...
Dare to wear the spirit that dances life into the world. Recognized across the Hopi, Zuni, and other Puebloan traditions, Kokopelli is the hunchbacked flute player — a bringer of...
Dare to wear the legend. Hidden in the hills, whispering in the trees — the Little People are legendary beings found in the oral traditions of many Native nations. Known...
Dare to wear the ones who watch from the shadows. Across dozens of Native nations — from the Cherokee to the Lakota, the Cree to the Shoshone — tales of...
Dare to wear the legend. Strange. Skinny. Mischievous. The Mannegishi are little trickster beings found in Cree and other Algonquian traditions — hairless, long-fingered, and always grinning. Said to live...
Dare to wear the mischief in the rocks. According to the Cree and other Algonquian stories, the Mannegishi are strange, six-fingered trickster spirits that dwell between the rocks along riverbanks....
Dare to wear the legend. Nanabozho — often portrayed as part human, part rabbit — appears in many Anishinaabe teachings as a clever, curious figure who learns by doing. Sometimes...