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Container Magic by Charity L. Bedell — Jar Spells, Sachets & Folk Magic Spellwork Guide

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Container Magic by Charity L. Bedell — the dedicated reference for jar spells, mojo bags, sachets, and container-based workings across conjure, Hoodoo, European folk magic, and modern witchcraft. Bedell provides herbal and crystal correspondences, construction guidance, and specific formulas organized by intention — a level of specialization rare in general spellcraft books. Essential for practitioners who work extensively with container-based magic formats.

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Quick Specs


  • Author: Charity L. Bedell
  • Type: Paperback spellwork guide
  • Traditions: Conjure, Hoodoo, European folk magic, modern witchcraft
  • Best for: Practitioners who want a dedicated container-magic reference with herbal and crystal correspondences


Jar Spells, Sachets, and the Art of Container Magic


Container magic is one of the oldest formats in folk magic traditions worldwide, from the mojo bags of American Hoodoo and the honey jars of Conjure to the witch bottles buried beneath doorsteps in seventeenth-century Britain. The practice treats the container itself as a working partner, a bounded space where ingredients concentrate their combined influence over time rather than releasing it in a single ritual moment. Charity L. Bedell draws on this long lineage while grounding her instruction in practical, reproducible technique.


This spellcraft and witchcraft book covers a wider range of container formats than most competing titles: packets and poppets for short-term workings, charm bags tuned for money magic, witch balls for long-term household protection, sealed jars, boxes, bottles, and sachets. Each format comes with guidance on ingredient selection, layering order, sealing methods, and disposal, details that spell-specific tutorials routinely skip. The inclusion of herbal and crystal correspondence tables means practitioners at any level can substitute materials without guessing.


From Hoodoo Honey Jars to Witch Bottles: Practical Tradition Covered


Where many spellcraft books treat jars as a single entry in a broader catalog of techniques, Bedell devotes the full text to the container format, giving readers the depth of instruction that a specialty subject deserves. She explains how the choice of container material, glass versus cloth versus wood versus metal, affects the character of the working, and she maps those choices onto specific traditions with historical honesty. The Conjure and Hoodoo sections reflect the African American folk magic lineages from the American South rather than blending them into a generic neo-Wiccan framework.


Incense and oil formulas appear alongside the herbal content, which matters because many container workings call for dressing ingredients or anointing the exterior of the vessel. The book also addresses what most competitors leave out: what to do when a working has run its course, how to safely dismantle or bury a container, and when to start over entirely. Those disposal and cleansing protocols reflect genuine traditional practice rather than improvised afterthought.


How to Use Container Magic by Charity L. Bedell


A practical three-step sequence drawn from Bedell's method for setting up, building, and closing a container working.

  1. Choose Your Container Format

    Read Bedell's opening chapters to match your goal to the right vessel type: a sealed jar for long-term workings, a charm bag for portable intent, a poppet for person-specific spells, or a witch ball for protective placement around the home.

  2. Gather and Layer Ingredients

    Use the herbal and crystal correspondence tables to select materials, then follow Bedell's layering guidelines, heaviest and most stable first, lighter botanicals above, petition paper or personal link near center, to build in sequence.

  3. Seal, Place, and Monitor the Working

    Apply Bedell's sealing method suited to your tradition, wax, cord, or knot work, then set the container in its designated location. Return to the disposal and cleansing chapter when the working has run its course so materials are handled correctly.


The Tarot Fellow Standard


I carry Container Magic because it fills a specific gap in my spellcraft shelf: a book wholly dedicated to vessel-based workings rather than treating jars and sachets as a footnote. Bedell's cross-traditional coverage, spanning Conjure, Hoodoo, European folk magic, and modern witchcraft, means it serves a wide range of customers without shortchanging any one lineage. If you're browsing my books and journals collection, this one earns its place alongside more general spellcraft titles as a specialist reference worth having within reach.


Frequently Asked Questions


Is Container Magic suitable for beginners with no prior spellwork experience?

Yes. Bedell opens with foundational concepts before specific formats, so readers new to folk magic can follow without prior knowledge. The correspondence tables make ingredient selection straightforward even without memorized associations.

Does the book cover traditions beyond Wicca?

It does. Bedell draws from Conjure, Hoodoo, and European folk magic alongside modern witchcraft, treating each tradition with its own context rather than folding everything into a single Wiccan framework. That breadth makes it cross-traditional.

What container types are covered in the book?

The book covers jars, bottles, boxes, charm bags, sachets, poppets, packets, and witch balls. Each format gets dedicated instruction covering intent matching, ingredient layering, sealing methods, and correct disposal when the working concludes.

Are oil and incense formulas included alongside the herbal content?

Yes. Incense and oil formulas appear throughout to complement the herbal correspondence tables. They are useful for dressing container exteriors or preparing the workspace before building a working, details that many jar-spell guides omit entirely.

Book cover of Container Magic by Charity L. Bedell with decorative gold elements and an illustration of a jar or vessel central to the design.