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Tetragrammaton Leather Journal with Latch, 4.5 x 6.5 Inch | Grimoire & Book of Shadows
Tetragrammaton Leather Journal with Latch, 4.5 x 6.5 Inch | Grimoire & Book of ShadowsCouldn't load pickup availability
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Few words carry more weight than the one embossed on this cover. The Tetragrammaton is the four Hebrew letters of the divine Name, among the most sacred words in the Western world, and the Tetragrammaton leather journal wears it on an aged-look cover closed with a latch. It is a fitting mark for a book meant to hold serious work: prayers, invocations, the study and practice of a path that takes the sacred seriously. Witches and ceremonial practitioners alike have long kept such books, added to by hand and kept close. 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 Tetragrammaton Leather Journal
The divine Name on the cover. The aged-look leather is embossed with the Tetragrammaton, the four Hebrew letters of the sacred Name, marking the book as one for serious and reverent work.
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.
Compact, with blank aged-look pages. At 4.5 by 6.5 inches it travels easily, and the unlined, aged-look pages take script, sigils, and diagrams alike.
Product Details
- Aged-look leather journal embossed with the Tetragrammaton, the four-letter Hebrew divine Name
- Latch closure
- Unlined, aged-look pages
- Size: 4.5 x 6.5 inches
- Uses: grimoire, Book of Shadows, prayer or study journal
The Spiritual Significance
The Tetragrammaton is the four Hebrew letters yod, he, vav, and he, written YHWH: the personal name of God in the Hebrew Bible and one of the most sacred words in Judaism. Out of reverence it is traditionally never spoken aloud; in prayer and reading, other names stand in its place. To carry it is to carry something held holy by an entire tradition, and that weight is part of what the symbol means.
Through Kabbalah and the Renaissance grimoire tradition, the four-letter Name also passed into Western ceremonial magic, where it has long been used as a supreme word of power in invocation, consecration, and protection. On the cover of a working book, it sets a tone of seriousness and reverence: a journal for prayer, study, and the kind of practice you approach with care. The Name asks for respect; what you write beneath it is yours, offered in whatever tradition and spirit you keep.
How To Use the Tetragrammaton Leather Journal
- Cleanse and dedicate it. Pass the book through cleansing smoke or leave it in moonlight, then name its purpose with the respect the cover invites.
- Keep your serious work here. Many reserve a Name-marked book for prayers, invocations, study, and the workings they take most seriously.
- Write your practice. Record rituals, reflections, and insights, building a personal reference over time.
- Use the pages freely. The unlined, aged-look paper takes script, sigils, and diagrams as easily as plain writing.
- 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 prayers, invocations, and the 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 keeping 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 the Tetragrammaton?
It is the four Hebrew letters, YHWH, that form the personal name of God in the Hebrew Bible. In Judaism it is profoundly sacred and traditionally never spoken aloud, with other names read in its place. It is one of the most revered words in the Western religious world.
What is this journal best used for?
Many keep a Name-marked book for their more serious work: prayers, invocations, study, and the rituals they approach with care. It also serves as a general grimoire or Book of Shadows. The blank pages take whatever practice you bring, in whatever tradition you keep.
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 prayers, charts, and notes rarely fit neatly between ruled lines.
How big is it?
The journal measures 4.5 by 6.5 inches, a compact size that fits easily in a bag, on an altar, or at a bedside. Despite the small footprint, there is ample room to keep a practice going over a long stretch of time.
How do I cleanse or dedicate it before use?
Pass the book through cleansing smoke, set it in moonlight overnight, or hold it and name its purpose. Given the Name on the cover, many approach this dedication with particular reverence. The point is to mark the book as yours before the first entry.

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