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Tarot Fellow

Tetragrammaton Leather-Look Journal -- Aged Grimoire with Latch

Regular price
$33.95
Regular price
$33.95
Sale price
$33.95
    Details
    Short description:

    Tetragrammaton leather journal — an orange-toned aged leather grimoire embossed with the pentagram surrounded by the Tetragrammaton (YHVH) in Hebrew and mystical symbols, secured with a metal clasp. The Tetragrammaton is central to Kabbalistic tradition, ceremonial magic, and the Golden Dawn system. This journal is ideal for recording ceremonial workings, Kabbalah study notes, Enochian practice, and planetary magic records in a vessel that honors the tradition’s aesthetic gravity.

    Description:

    Quick Specs

    • Size: 4.5" x 6.5"
    • Author: Blank journal (no author)
    • Publisher: Raven's Wing Magical Co. / imported
    • Format: Leather hardcover with latch, aged paper interior
    • Best for: Ceremonial magic records, Kabbalah study notes, Enochian working journals

    The Tetragrammaton as a Kabbalistic and Ceremonial Symbol

    The Tetragrammaton, the four Hebrew letters Yod-He-Vav-He (YHVH) representing the unspoken name of the divine in Jewish tradition, sits at the center of Kabbalistic theology, ceremonial magic, and the Golden Dawn system of initiatory magic. In Kabbalistic cosmology these four letters correspond to the four worlds: Atziluth, Beriah, Yetzirah, and Assiah, as well as the four elements and the four sides of the Tree of Life. Any serious practitioner working within the Western esoteric tradition will return to the Tetragrammaton repeatedly as both a theoretical anchor and a practical symbol.

    This journal carries the Tetragrammaton embossed within a pentagram on the orange-toned aged leather cover, paired with a metal clasp that keeps the record sealed between workings. The pentagram-Tetragrammaton pairing appears explicitly in Golden Dawn ritual, where the five points of the star correspond to Spirit and the four elements mapped to the divine name's letters. Keeping a grimoire with this emblem functions as an ongoing statement of the tradition the practitioner inhabits.

    Aged Paper, Latch Closure, and Practical Use

    The interior pages have an aged, cream-toned appearance that suits the aesthetic gravity of ceremonial record-keeping. The pages are unlined, which allows for diagrams, sigils, planetary magic squares, and ritual layouts alongside written notes. The metal latch provides a physical seal that many ceremonial practitioners find ritually meaningful, a book that can be opened and closed with intention rather than simply flipped through. The journal suits both regular practice logs and dedicated ritual records for specific operations.

    How to Use the Tetragrammaton Journal

    How to set up and maintain a ceremonial magic record in this Tetragrammaton grimoire journal.

    1. Consecrate Before First Use

      Before writing anything, consecrate the journal in your tradition's manner. Many ceremonial practitioners trace the Tetragrammaton letters on the cover, speak a dedication, and seal it with the latch.

    2. Structure Entries with Date and Planetary Hour

      Record each working with the date, day of the week, and planetary hour at the top. These details allow you to cross-reference results against astrological conditions later and build a genuine record of your ceremonial work.

    3. Include Diagrams and Post-Working Observations

      Use the unlined pages to sketch ritual layouts, sigils, or Tree of Life diagrams alongside written entries. Post-working observations recorded within 24 hours capture subtle details that memory alone will not preserve accurately.

    The Tarot Fellow Standard

    I stock this journal because ceremonial practitioners deserve a record book that matches the seriousness of the work. A cheap notebook does not honor a Golden Dawn operation the way a latch-sealed grimoire does. Browse my leather journals for additional options in the same tradition, or explore the broader range in my full journal collection.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the Tetragrammaton and why is it significant?

    YHVH, the four Hebrew letters of the divine name, maps to the four elements, four worlds of Kabbalah, and four directions in ceremonial magic. It is central to the Golden Dawn system and Kabbalistic Tree of Life work.

    Are the journal pages lined or blank?

    The pages have an aged, cream-toned appearance and are unlined, allowing for both written notes and drawn diagrams, sigils, planetary squares, and ritual layouts without the constraint of ruled lines.

    What does the latch clasp do?

    The metal clasp holds the journal closed between workings. Many ceremonial practitioners find a latched grimoire ritually useful as a book that can be opened and sealed with deliberate intention, unlike a standard notebook.

    Is this journal a good gift for a Kabbalah or ceremonial magic practitioner?

    Yes. The Tetragrammaton and pentagram embossing signals a serious esoteric orientation. It is appropriate for anyone working in the Golden Dawn, Thelemic, or Kabbalistic traditions who keeps a formal magical record.

    Orange-toned aged leather-look journal with embossed pentagram and Tetragrammaton Hebrew lettering surrounded by mystical symbols, secured with a metal clasp.