motown cake

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Matic shop generator 5e is a tool designed for players and Dungeon Masters (DMs) of the popular tabletop role-playing game, Dungeons & Dragons (D&D). This generator provides a quick and easy way to create a variety of shops in the game world, complete with items, prices, and even shopkeepers. With the Matic shop generator 5e, players and DMs no longer need to spend hours crafting detailed shop inventories from scratch. Instead, they can simply input a few parameters, such as the type of shop, its location, and the desired level of rarity for the items, and the generator will do the rest. The Matic shop generator 5e can generate a wide range of shops, including general stores, weapon shops, armor shops, magic item shops, and more. Each shop will have a unique selection of items appropriate to its type, ensuring that players always have access to the items they need.

Yule tree embellishments of pagan origin

Each shop will have a unique selection of items appropriate to its type, ensuring that players always have access to the items they need. One of the great features of this generator is its ability to randomly generate unique shopkeepers for each shop. These shopkeepers can be given names, personalities, and even rumors or quests to provide additional depth to the game world.

Yule tree embellishments of pagan origin

We have had our Yule Tree since Raven and I have lived together, always topped with the radiant sun. I think I made a post about our Yule Tree in 2011, or at least intended to, because I found an old collage of the Yule Tree from when we still lived in the apartment! Raven and I have been together for a decade now, and I like how we have formed our own mini-traditions for our mini-family. Every year we have celebrated Christmas day with found-family, some of whom have strained family relationships and painful memories of the festive period like myself. Solstice has often been celebrated with the broad group of friends met through the Highland Open Circle. The Yule tree has glittered through all of that, a symbol of both festivals, and of Raven and I merging our ideas.

2011 Solstice decorations. I think I took these photos

I have a second, smaller tree in my study, known as the 'Gothmas' tree or the 'Cryptmas' tree which is black, purple and silver with sklls, bones, black cats and tomb-stones, but it will get its own post as it is an entirely secular festive decoration - and very much an aesthetic suited to the main Gothic theme of this blog rather than a Pagan thing.

The Yule Tree, 2017. My photo

The main difference between our tree and the average Christmas tree are the solar decorations. As well as gilded plaster decorations of the sun and moon, there is a large sun on the top of the tree instead of a star. I think it was actually manufactured as a starburst, but being gold and amber, and with so many radiating points, it certainly looks very solar.

Sun-burst tree-topper with gold & amber sparkles. 2017, by me

Glowing sun bauble, 2017, by me.
I am on the look out for more sun-themed decorations for our tree, especially gold ones. It is not, as is to be expected, the most popular motif among mainstream sellers of decorations, however gold decorations in general are pretty popular. Plain gold baubles can look pretty solar, as can translucent ones if they are the right texture and carefully illuminated - I think they are the most 'realistic' solar depictions on our tree. We also have the other kind of solar decoration, the sun-face design reminiscent of Sol made popular in medieval heraldry. It's an image that hangs on our tree, but is also in the Solstice decorations around our house and on our altar, as visible on the altar post.

Sun decoration. Photographed 2017

Sun bauble 2018, my photo.
I bought the sun, and it's twin - a gilded moon - secondhand on eBay. I buy a LOT of things secondhand, online on eBay, in charity shops, from Facebook sales groups, etc. mostly because it is cheaper, but also because it seems you find more unusual things, especially older things, if you shop in those sorts of places. I know folk are probably tired of hearing me yammer on about the environment, but it is very important to re-use the stuff we have already made, or recycle where possible, rather than constantly use up more and more of our natural resources to make new things by energy-intensive and polluting processes (it's also worth noting that some forms of recycling are high energy, too). If you are feeling crafty, there are plenty of craft projects for tree decorations that are also recycling projects; maybe next year I'll put some on my blog.

Moon bauble, 2018? My photo.

We have a moon bauble as well as a sun one, because while we celebrate the returning sun and coming of warmer weather, we also celebrate the longest night and those cosy evenings indoors, the snow on the hills and importance of winter in the cycle of things. The balance is important, and although there are a lot of harsh things about winter weather, that harsh weather kills off harmful pests and parasites, the frost can be what triggers some plants to grow, and snow-sports are a big part of the local economy in some regions of the Highlands. Winter is not inherently a bad thing, just as summer is not inherently a good thing; they both have their benefits and also bring problems (eg. summer can bring drought, wild-fires, sunburn, heat exhaustion etc.). In my form of Paganism I try and celebrate the seasons as they come, and while there is always something hopeful about the returning light in darkness, sometimes it's important to appreciate that darkness too (a familiar mentality for Goths!).

Star decoration chosen for the pentagram of ribbons and sunburst centre

Our Yule Tree has decorations that aren't solar, like owls (getting a new owl each year has become a tradition in our household, too), a blown-glass witch, some skulls, lots of tartan and deer, a fuzzy wolf to represent our friend 'Sarge' and a lot of pine-cones, some glass, some real, as well as snowflakes and snowy things of various designs; it's a seasonal tree at its heart; the ever-green pine (in our case because it's plastic and thus literally can't die) decorated with symbols of winter, much like most festive trees. and unlike my Gothmas tree, which is more a touch of Hallowe'en in midwinter! But the Gothmas tree will get its own post next!

Ancient Egyptians used to decorate the temples dedicated to Ra, the god of the sun, with green palm during the Winter Solstice. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Motown cake

The Matic shop generator 5e is a valuable tool for both players and DMs. Players can use it to quickly find and purchase the items they need, while DMs can use it to populate their game world with interesting and engaging shops. By saving time on creating shop inventories, DMs can focus on other aspects of the game, such as crafting immersive storylines and challenging encounters. Overall, the Matic shop generator 5e is a valuable resource for D&D players and DMs, providing a streamlined way to create and populate shops in the game world. Its ease of use and ability to generate unique shops and shopkeepers make it an essential tool for anyone playing or running a D&D campaign..

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motown cake

motown cake