Plentiful Earth | Spiritual Store
Triple Moon Book of Shadows Leather Journal with Latch | Grimoire
Triple Moon Book of Shadows Leather Journal with Latch | GrimoireCouldn't load pickup availability
-
Ships In 1-2 Days
-
180 Day Returns
-
Trusted By 1,000+ Spiritualists
A working witch needs a working book, and this is one made to be filled. A triple moon, the lunar emblem of the Goddess, is embossed on the aged-look cover with a blue stone set at its center, and a latch holds it closed. This leather Book of Shadows arrives blank and waiting, ready to hold the spells, rituals, and lore you gather over the years. Witches have always kept such books, copied and added to by hand and kept close, and the aged-look pages here suit that slow, personal kind of writing. Blank pages are an invitation rather than an instruction, and what fills this one is yours, growing more yours with every entry.
Key Features of the Book of Shadows
A triple moon and blue stone cover. The aged-look leather is embossed with the triple moon, the waxing, full, and waning faces of the Goddess in Wicca, set with an inset blue stone at the center.
A latch to keep it shut. The clasp closes the book between sittings, a small act of warding that keeps your private writings to yourself.
Aged-look pages. The unlined, rough-edged aged paper lets you mix script, sigils, and sketches on the same page, the way a working book rarely stays just text.
Product Details
- Aged-look leather Book of Shadows with an embossed triple moon and an inset blue stone
- Latch closure
- Unlined, aged paper with rough edges
- Uses: Book of Shadows, grimoire, ritual or working diary
The Spiritual Significance
The Book of Shadows is the witch's own book: the private record of spells cast, rituals worked, correspondences gathered, and lore worth keeping. The name itself comes from modern witchcraft, used by Gerald Gardner for the Gardnerian tradition's book in the 1950s, but the practice it names is far older, reaching back through the handwritten grimoires of the medieval and Renaissance world. A witch's book has always been personal, copied and added to by hand, and kept close.
That is what this journal is made to become. The aged-look pages and the latch suit a book meant to be lived with rather than displayed, filled slowly and guarded between sittings. There is no single right way to keep one: some work strictly by tradition, others gather everything from dreams to recipes between the covers. However you keep yours, the book grows into a record of your path, and it becomes more yours, and more useful, with every entry.
How To Use Your Book of Shadows
- Cleanse and dedicate it. Pass the book through cleansing smoke or leave it in moonlight, then name its purpose and claim it as your own.
- Begin with what matters. Record the spells, rituals, and correspondences you use most, so the book becomes a working reference rather than a blank ideal.
- Add as you go. Bring in dreams, omens, sabbat notes, and reflections over time, copying in by hand what you want to keep.
- Use the pages freely. The aged-look paper takes sigils, diagrams, and pressed herbs as easily as script.
- Keep it latched. Close the clasp between sittings to keep the book private, and trust your own sense of what belongs inside.
Pairs Well With
- Aged Leather Journal with Latch: the plain sibling in the same line, for a second volume or a separate working.
- Dragon's Blood Ink by Espiritu, 1 oz: a traditional ritual ink for petitions, sigils, and entries you want to set apart.
- Ritual Calligraphic Set by Lo Scarabeo: a pen set that lends a ceremonial hand to your writing.
- Buckland's Complete Book of Witchcraft by Raymond Buckland: a classic walkthrough of building a Book of Shadows from the ground up.
- White Selenite Generator: a gentle way to cleanse and consecrate the book before you begin.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Book of Shadows?
It is a witch's personal book of spells, rituals, correspondences, and lore, kept and added to by hand. The name comes from modern Wicca, though witches and magicians have kept private books for centuries. What goes in yours is up to you; many treat it as both a working manual and a journal.
Are the pages lined?
No, the pages are unlined with an aged look, which lets you mix writing, sigils, diagrams, and sketches on a single page. Unlined pages suit a working book, since spells, charts, and notes rarely fit neatly between ruled lines.
How do I cleanse or dedicate it before use?
Pass the book through cleansing smoke, set it in moonlight overnight, or hold it and speak a simple dedication naming its purpose. There is no single correct rite; the point is to mark the blank book as yours and set your intention before the first entry.
Do I have to follow a particular tradition?
Not at all. Some witches keep a Book of Shadows strictly by their tradition's structure, while many keep a personal, eclectic one that holds whatever they practice. The book is a tool, not a rulebook, so let your own path decide what fills it.
Can a beginner use this?
Yes. Starting a Book of Shadows is one of the best ways to begin, since writing your practice down is how it takes shape and sticks. Beginners and longtime witches keep the same kind of book; only the contents grow with you over time.

Spend $100 & enjoy guilt-free shopping with our free shipping on all orders. Get your favorite items delivered right to your door at no extra cost.