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Businesses can engage with prospects on social media by using FunnelAmplified's social selling software. Through this, they will be able to build relations...
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Dragon's Blood & Ochre Beeswax Tapers (SOLD OUT)
The latest offering from Wending Wares Occult Parlor is a very limited supply of 10 specialty Ritual Candles, devised to empower and/or strengthen any magical working that makes use of them. Use them as the backbone of a simple spell, or incorporate it into other spellwork for extra oomph.
Each handmade beeswax taper has been hallowed under the auspices of the Dragon Star, Eltanin, and imbued with the virtues of Red Ochre, ethically sourced Dragon's Blood resin, and my homemade Wisefool's Oil (a highly potent Ritual Oil devised for all manner of sorcerous empowerment.)
Each candle is approximately 4 inches/10 centimeters long and burns for approximately 30 minutes. Each order comes with a small carrying bag.
Please handle open flames safely!
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The Lost Entrepreneurs Handbook
The Lost Book Project charges $13 for this collection. If you found this roundup useful, please consider donating to the Internet Archive instead.
Other roundups here
Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill - The Earliest Book (1937)
The Law of Success in 16 Lessons by Napoleon Hill (1925)
Outwitting the Devil by Napoleon Hill (Unknown)
How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie (1936)
How to Stop Worrying and Start Living by Dale Carnegie (1944)
How to Develop Self-Confidence & Influence People by Dale Carnegie (1956)
The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith (1776)
The Richest Man in Babylon by George Clayson (1926)
The Greatest Salesman In The World by OG Mandino (1968)
Ed note: This is a rental; book is still in publication and copyright!
How I Raised Myself From Failure to Success in Selling by Frank Bettger (1958)
The Science of Getting Rich by Wallace D. Wattles (1910)
The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham (1949)
Ed note: This is a rental; this book is still in publication and copyright!
Theory of Business Enterprise by Thorstein Veblen (1904)
Business Cycles by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1913)
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money by John Maynard Keynes (1936)
Value and Capital by John Hicks (1939)
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Flourish AU - Dragonheart Pirkko - Durmond Priory
Champion of the Caustic Elder Dragon
"Lasting change isn't gentle. It's harsh, abrasive, and inescapable. Either we'll adapt or we'll die trying."
"A better world starts with deciding what we're prepared to lose."
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Hand forged j2 stainless steel knife hunting knife with beautiful rose wood handle
For sale send a dm for price nad details
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Slim and scalpel-like kiridashi
now available on @etsy
ironboneknives.etsy.com
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New Flash Sale: Primary Dusthide Gene: Checkers
A new flash sale has been discovered for Primary Dusthide Gene: Checkers
A scroll that will change the primary gene of one Dusthide dragon to Checkers. This item can only be used once and will disappear after it has been applied.
Game database: click here
Marketplace link: click here
Treasure: 80000 64000
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Your sales process can definitely benefit from social media. What are the practical implications? Salespeople can leverage social media by using these three broad techniques. 1. Develop your leadership skills
Brands create content for four social platforms out of the top five channels. You can
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This rose suction + vibe toy gets me DRIPPING!
Vid of me using the rose
$3 (put “🌹” + ur tumblr @ for your note)
Vid of me showing off my excessive juices
$2 (put “💦” + ur tumblr @ for your note)
BOTH!! + 2 bonus nudes!!!
$5! (Put ����💦 + ur tumblr @ for your note)
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Blackened Whitethorn Wand (For Sale)
This wand was created using a branch of storm-blown Hawthorn wood, which I discovered on Imbolc of 2023. It measures approximately 32 inches/81 centimeters in length, and it is currently being sold for $99.
After debarking the piece and allowing it to fully dry, I went about carefully smoothing the surface of the wood, making sure to preserve any larger thorns present on tne piece. Once I was satisfied with the texture of the specimen, I blackened it with a stain made with Hearth Soot harvested from the interior of our Wood Stove, which I used to coat the wand, layer after layer, for days. In the end, having thoroughly layered the black pigment onto the wood, I used Wisefool's Oil (a ritually enlivened oil of empowerment, which also serves as a lovely wood conditioner) to polish away the excess, and then sealed the whole piece with Wisefool's Glaze (a personally developed wood varnish made from an array of precious and potent arboreal resins, such as Dragon's Blood, Storax, and Black Frankincense.) Finally, I gave it one last, thin coating of polyurethane to help thoroughly protect it.
Between the rich magical folklore of the Hawthorn, and the energy, time, and care that went into creating it, I believe this wand has the potential to serve as an lovely tool in the hands of the right practitioner.
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, then please free free to reach out to me through tumblr messenger, or buy it directly on my shop, Wending Wares Occult Parlor.
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There was an estate sale on our street today, so my roommate and I walked over to take a look around and see if there were any good fiber craft materials around. And boy howdy were there and now I'm emotional. The woman that lived there was obviously a quilter, because there were two absolutely stunning hand quilted quilts hanging on a blanket ladder in the living room for sale. If I had $200 I would have taken one home because her stitches were so tiny and straight and her piecing was impeccable. And there was a box of crocheted doilys and pillow case edging, and another box of vintage glass buttons, and another box of embroidery floss, and another box of embroidery practice sheets and fabric. I ended up buying her sewing kit basket because I saw some lovely needle books from the 40s in there at first glance.
And in the process of going through her kit, I found bird feathers and small smooth pebbles and little bits and bobs she had tucked away for some reason or another. She kept her straight pins in an old prescription bottle from 1969. She strung all her safety pins onto a kilt pin. She had 6 packs of upholstery needles in her kit. I have no idea who this woman was, but I know she went to Paris in 1971 and brought home a hotel sewing kit and took the time to write down the dates of her trip.
And then I found her chunk of bees wax and got so so emotional. She'd obviously used that particular chunk for countless projects and it looks like a flower from all the times she's pulled floss over it. I'm holding all these parts of this woman's life and I'll never know her or her story, but I do get to marvel at her tools and her work.
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any tips for getting into knitting? I tried knitting a scarf once and finished it, but dropped off after that. I find it very intimidating to try anything more interesting like a sweater
hi anon! i love this question! a scarf was my first project too, and it's a great first project, but tbh a scarf is kind of boring to do. I recommend doing a project like a hat or a blanket to dip your toe into knitting in the round.
i am working on my first ever sweater so I won't pretend to be an expert but i find knitting in the round, with needles connected by a cable, much more enjoyable than knitting flat (though you can knit everything flat), and you can also just turn the work over and over again while using a circular needle set to work a big project. after I made my scarf I made this blanket (here's the free pattern) using one long circular needle. It was interesting because it requires lots of different stitches, so you learn a lot and it looks fancy but it's still relatively easy, and it's the perfect time of year to make a blanket. it also knits up fast because it's super bulky so it doesn't take very long :) here's my blanket!
a hat is also fun and i promise it is pretty easy! all you need to know is how to cast on and how to join your stitches together without twisting the cast on (here's a good example). hats knit up pretty fast, i finished this hat in a few days. here's a free and popular basic pattern for a hat.
the good thing about knitting is that it has a ton of built in community. go to any yarn store and you will find knitters just hanging out, happy to help you with a project or trade techniques. Ravelry is a great resource for finding patterns or help. I love tincanknits for their designs and their tutorials. there is a lot of help online. I can post some of my favorite resource blogs for knitting help. knitting is also very social, you can knit while chatting with friends, you can knit on skype, you can go to knitting circles (my local pub has a knitting circle sunday nights).
at the end of the day, knitting means that you have to let go of perfectionism because it's so common to start a new project and have to learn new skills to finish that project. eventually as you learn how knitting works you learn that mistakes are a) part of it b) easily fixable c) won't hold you back from enjoying the end result. my blanket has a ton of mistakes because i am a beginner knitter but we still use it every day and i still like how it looks. it works out.
happy knitting <3
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you can tell a lot about a person by how they treat waiters and also if they think you should be pirating all adobe products. also, completely unrelated to this btw, fuck adobe
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