Posts Tagged ‘knotwork’
Product Description
This beautiful solid sterling silver moon pendant features an openwork Celtic knotwork pattern. The pendant measures 1 1/8 inches in diameter, with a jump ring included so you can add it to a bracelet or necklace It makes a great gift for anyone who loves Celtic art.
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Product Description
The triscele or triskelion has been used since ancient times in Celtic culture to symbolize the cycle of life.This awesome decorative wall mirror features beautiful, intricate Celtic knotwork patterns and trisceles around the blackened cost cast resin border. It measures 9 1/2 inches tall, 9 1/2 inches wide and 1/2 an inch deep. The mirrored glass is 6 3/4 inches in diameter. It adds a great look to foyers, hallways and living rooms.This wall mirror is BRAND NEW… More >>
To the eye, the Celtic knot might come off as an endless cord intertwined together. Resembling a neverending string or rope. That is the difference between this knot and any other knot. No beginning or end resembles eternity, infinity, omniscience, omnipotence or omnipresence. In other words, no end in time, space, knowledge, power etc.
If getting this as a tattoo design, many people use those meanings as a guide to convey their dreams, goals, ambitions, etc. As mentioned earlier, these knots can have other differences.
One of the various types is the Trinity Celtic knot. It’s a 3 cornered knot. It has 3 corners that have 3 curved lines connecting them. It can be drawn with more complexity by interweaving other knots into the pattern. This Celtic knot design is most widely accepted as a mystical or religious symbol. A Christian would probably refer to the 3 corners as The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. In pagan beliefs it may mean Mother, Crone and Maiden.
There is also a 4 cornered Celtic knot, called the quarterary knot. Since this design is so complex, it can be very complicated. As with most all Celtic knot designs the meaning can be a family heritage or crest. It may also be a symbol of good luck (is in the four leaf clover). Many believe that the 4 corners represent the elements: earth, wind, fire, and water. Other meanings for the 4 corners are… the 4 directions, the 4 books of the Gospel (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John) or even the 4 seasons.
After the Trinity Celtic knot came a similiar knot called the round knot. The round knot has the Trinity knot inside it with more more complex designs around it. The significance behind this knot can mean earth, fire and water.
All Celtic knot designs can be inked to fit into a special shape as well. Celtic knot designs can be found on multiple places such as tomestones, and stone crosses, doorways, etc. But the one thing that won’t change about the Celtic knot is that it will always be just 1 solid line from beginning to end.
You will also see Celtic knots in a combination of several designs. Such as, circles in the Trinity design. Or even 2 designs interlaced together. If you are considering using a Celtic knot design for your tattoo, take some time to design artwork that means something to you. There are few rules and, with a little effort, you will come up with a tattoo you can be proud of.
I wish you the best in your selection of a great Celtic knot tattoo design.
For more information on Celtic Designs or other tattoo designs and for a FREE Tattoo Ebook visit:
http://www.tattoodesigndownloads.com
Originally posted 2010-08-25 18:46:00.
celtic knotwork rings gound online. Tungsten Wedding Rings, Celtic Jewelry â Old Meets New
Tungsten rings and jewelry made palladium are cutting edge. Unlike traditional gold and silver rings which are relatively soft, tungsten rings are virtually indestructible, and will shine for decades without the need for polishing!
On the other hand, when it comes to wedding rings Celtic jewelry represent an ancient tradition. As a distinct group of people, the Celts were perhaps the first Indo-Aryan speakers to enter Europe, as long ago as 3,000 B.C.E. Although they never coalesced to form an empire in the political sense, their cultural influence spanned the entire continent and beyond, from Galatia in present-day Turkey to islands off the west coast of Ireland. Today, their descendants in Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Cornwall and Brittany continue to influence the design of modern jewelry with Celtic knotwork rings in the form of tungsten rings and palladium wedding bands.
About celtic knotwork rings
Ancient Celtic art shares an interesting aspect with art in the Islamic world. Both religious traditions, while having almost nothing in common in terms of theology, have historically shared proscriptions against the depiction of living things, i.e. plants, animals and people. Muslim artists, strongly influenced by mathematics, thus based their works on geometric patterns, while art among the Celtic tribes took the form of interwoven cords known as plaits. These ancient designs are now regularly worked into modern Celtic knotwork rings.
Despite the fact that modern Wiccans sometimes attribute magical properties to Celtic knotwork, there is no historical or archeological evidence to show that Celtic art had any religious or ceremonial significance â and thatâs all right. It is enough for wedding rings, Celtic jewelry and other pieces to simply look attractive; elaborate Celtic knot engagement rings can certainly be enjoyed on a strictly aesthetic basis.
The Use of Modern Metals
Tacori rings bring this ancient Celtic tradition into the 21st Century with tungsten carbide wedding rings and palladium wedding bands. These space-age metals are extremely durable and long lasting. Because of their sheer hardness, tungsten rings (made of the same material as the filaments in old-style incandescent light bulbs) do not scratch easily, and since they do not become tarnished, they need very little in the way of maintenance (such as polishing).
Metals such as tungsten and palladium have become more valuable then gold and platinum; not only are palladium wedding bands and tungsten rings uncommonly beautiful, they also make an excellent investment.
Jonathon Blocker specializes in diamond jewelry and watches. He is a consultant for Rokstok.com, a trusted name in the jewelry industry since 1999.
Originally posted 2010-08-25 00:47:53.
Often on Celtic jewelry websites you will see that a merchant has labeled certain knots as having particular meaning, such as “unity,” “friendship,” or “love.” More often than not, these labels are marketing tactics. Even to say the knots symbolize how the world is interconnected, though true in the most general sense, does not provide much information relevant to a deep understanding of Celtic knots. In this article, I’ll show how to interpret Celtic knot work from a universal perspective, based on a fusion of teachings from Native people and classic Western philosophy.
We’ll begin with a few concepts to lay the foundation necessary for this thought. A core belief held universally in many indigenous cultures is that everything that exists is alive. This may seem like a concept that is alien to Western thought, until you read Plato’s account of creation in the Timaeus, where he expressed the same concept as a “likely story.” http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/timaeus.html
This view of the cosmos in classical Western culture that was allied with indigenous values was eventually decimated by the march of empires. Power structures are intimately connected with the commoditization of the material world. The rise of institutional Christianity, which history shows is ruled by the god of war, Mars; not the prince of peace, provide a “spiritual” justification for disconnection: the scripture says, man has dominion over the earth, which contradicts the indigenous view that man’s purpose is to bring balance to the earth. Today, the power structures of empire, are the corporations, which view everything on the earth as commodity in a resource-to-cash-to-trash economy.
The circle energy in our culture has been weakened. What remains is a empty longing for connection, filled by anti-depressants, drugs and rage. The tremendous gift of life is structured in such a way as to squeeze out the spirit for the sake of making a living. Yet somewhere in the psyche is a dim remembrance, a longing to return somewhere east of Eden.
Everyone was once from a tribe that survived by being rooted close to the natural cycles. The Celts did not build temples; they made offerings to the spirit of a grove or the sacred spring. If the rocks, trees and clouds speak to you, respect and reverence of all that exists in the natural world follows. We see fragments of this type of perspective in the stories of Orpheus, and the miracles of St. Frances of Assisi.
If we borrow this concept, bringing spirit and soul back into the material world, and view all that exists as alive, then the knots themselves can be viewed as alive. We have to shift our concept away from high school biology to understand.
From a Platonic perspective, the pure forms of the circles, squares, triangles in Celtic knots drive creativity in the universe. Everything around us is formed from some kind of geometric shape that are the blue prints of all that exists. If we see these shapes as alive, then the corollary is to see that they have the same right to exist as we do.
This concept, again, involves quite a stretch. It is a radical view of seeing what is as a radically equal element of the whole. As humans, we are used to seeing ourselves as the most important species that exists, but how can we know, other than by our own biased faith which has created gods in our own image, that the universe as a whole sees us that way?
Yet this right to exist forms the basis for relating to these knots. If we are spirit and matter has spirit, we can have a spirit to spirit relationship to anything. We can contemplate and communicate with things, gaining insight and forming an alliance which can be like medicine. This can be done in any environment. We can be urban tribes people, searching for connection where ever it may be. This spirit to spirit relationship is the basic understanding behind mystic Native philosophy. It is also a way for all of us who did not have this background to begin to bring some kind of connected circles back to our lives.
This radical concept is contrary to the mechanistic Cartesian view, yet it is not so far from modern particle physics. Experiments published in major scientific journals have shown that human DNA does influence matter. Studies have shown that prayer actually works, which means that there are many operating principals behind what appears that influence events in mysterious ways. We depend upon our psychic readings of energy all the time for information: we walk into a room and get a feeling, for example. Our capacity to empathize depends upon energy. But mostly this has been an unexamined, unconscious ability in people who have been conditioned through education to identify with the left side of their brain.
Native people speak of the “great hoops,” which is another way of saying that we are all connected. To attempt to live in harmony with “all our relations” means assuming a new level of rewarding responsibility. Prosac isn’t needed when we’re a deeply connected part of the whole.
Let’s now explore how knot work motifs exist as inspirited, complex blue prints by looking at one of the most common Celtic motifs: the circle. Planets, eyes, bones, tires, electrical wire, wedding rings, cells are all composed of circles. We speak of our circle of friends and the seasons. What goes around, comes around. Now, the question for you is, what is the modus operandi of a circle?
You can do the same exercise with a square, triangle, oval or cross. Why are bird feathers triangular instead of square? The questions are endless. Start by making a list where these shapes exist around you. Then, try to grasp how they are functioning alone and in combinations with other blue prints in the knot work.
The final step is to lean into the mystery of these shapes by meditating on them. To interact with the unseen world, you will need to believe it exists and earn the knowledge. If you develop a working alliance with these objects, they can assist on your path. Live with these blue prints like Zen koan or teaching stories.
Over time, Celtic knot work will bring unexpected insights. For those of us trying to find our new tribe, this view can shift the foundations of our perceptions and bring us information which can deepen our relationship to the cosmos.
Product Description
Two Eternal Classic Celtic Knots Come Together in a V Shape With Intricate Detail Over a Bright Green Pear-Shaped Genuine Peridot Stone Drop. Set with a Genuine 7x10mm Peridot Adjustable From 16.5″ – 17.5″ – 18.5″ in Length Central Setting is 1.5″ Wide with a 1.25″ Drop Weighs approximately 7.4 grams Closes with a Lobster Claw Clasp Marked .925 … More >>
Sterling Silver Celtic Knot Knotwork Necklace with a Bright Green 7x10mm Peridot
Beautiful Celtic Jewelry: Celtic crosses, Claddagh and Celtic knotwork in Sterling Silver and Bronze
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