Tag Archives: hoodoo

an outline of a person surrounded by blue light and rays of blue and green light radiating out from them.

Glamour spells for Influence and Success

For this spell you will need

1 package of Influence Bath Crystals
1 package of Look Me Over Bath Crystals
1 lucky stone

1 bottle of Influence Oil
1 bottle of Look Me Over oil
1 package of Influence incense

1 package of Look me Over incense
1 package of Influence Powder
1 package of Look Me Over Powder

1 red candle

A picture of yourself

A mirror


This spell is meant to give you that sparkle, where people are just drawn to you, and when they are drawn to you, they will also fall under your influence, and be easily persuaded.

Mix together the Influence and Look Me Over Bath crystals. Take a tablespoon of that mixture and mix it into a quart of water until it dissolves. Take a wash cloth and soak it in the bath and use it to wipe your body, starting at your ankles and going up to your neck, and including your face if you desire. 

Take the remaining water, and use that on a lucky stone you have purchased in advance. This can be any stone, but birth stones are highly recommended. This stone can be loose, but if it is a pendant, or a ring, or a center piece of a necklace, where people can notice it, it works better..  You can drop the stone into the water, or just sprinkle a small amount with your hands. Dry the stone, and then anoint it with the combination of the Influence and Look Me Over oil.

Allow your body to air dry, and when you’re dry anoint your body with Influence and Look Me Over oil. Start with your feet and rub a small amount on the soles of your feet, behind your knees, just above your navel, on your wrists, the bend of your elbow, at the meeting point of your collarbones, and behind the lobes of your ears. Then put on clean fresh clothes, put on your stone or have it in your pocket, or purse etc… and mix together the Influence and Look Me Over Incense, and burn some, and waft the smoke over yourself and walk through it.

Take your picture, and write around your image “Look At Me” and “Heed My Wishes”
Put the picture down and sprinkle a ring of Influence and Look Me Over Powder over the words and around your image. Set a candle holder on top of this. Anoint the red candle with Influence and Look Me Over oils. It can be any size of candle, but the best results I have experienced are if the burn time aligns with the time you will be out. A short evening or an interview can work well with a four hour chime candle. A six hour taper can be good for a day at work or a long evening. 

While the candle burns, take out a mirror. Any size mirror, whether a compact or hand mirror, or even set the candle before a vanity mirror. Look into the mirror, either with the candle reflected in it, or holding the mirror before the candle and looking into the mirror. Focus your gaze on your eyes and face, stirring the power of glamour and fascination within you. Know that your presence and focused attention radiates personal magnetism, drawing whoever you desire to fall under your influence.

I chose a red candle for this spell because of how Red is a powerful and attention grabbing color. You could use other bright colors as well, such as yellow, orange or pink.

Mint Magic for Domestic Bliss

Here is a series of spells to do for your home bring about peace, protection, love, and financial security, especially for the home. The key feature of these spells is that they all feature members of the Mint family of herbs often called Lamiaceae or Labiateae. This spell was a free spell I did for Lucky Mojo Hoodoo Rootwork Hour.



First cleanse the home to remove any harmful and unwanted influences.

Mix together Basil, lemon balm, and hyssop. Take a tablespoon of this mixture and make it into a strong tea. Add this to your usual floor wash  and scrub the floors of your home, moving from back to front. 

You can also grind the herbs finely using a spice grinder, and mix that with baking soda to make a carpet cleaning powder.

Then mix together sage, rosemary, and uncrossing incense. Burn that on charcoal and smoke your home to further drive off harmful influences.

Mix together spearmint, marjoram and protection powder and sprinkle that around your home, to protect it from unwanted influences entering in. You can add oregano to that to make it keep the law away as well. 

For health and well being put Heal All and Wood Betony into a white flannel bag, and anoint it with blessing oil. Keep this under your mattress between the box spring so you will have peaceful and healing rest. 

To enhance love or draw new love, mix together catnip, lavender and patchouli. Infuse a tablespoon of that mixture into a pint of hot water, mix that with a gallon of cool water and bathe in it, drawing it up from your feet to your neck or head. Save the remaining water, put on clean fresh clothes, and take that saved water outside. Take ten steps from your front door of your home or building, and sprinkle that water back to your door. 

To protect your money and finances, mix together peppermint, thyme and skullcap. Add a pinch of that mixture to your wallet or purse. You can also keep a bowl on your mantel or add a pinch to a cash register or your business or keep it with your financial statements to protect your money.

An interesting crossroads ritual

The following is the text of a crossroads ritual from Harry M Hyatt’s 5 volume collection of Hoodoo Conjuration Witchcraft Rootwork


This was titled by Hyatt as Directional Star

If they had an idea of traveling , like if they wanted tub go north or wanted tuh go to California or Oklahoma – well , they haven ‘t got the money to go with . So they goes , walk out tuh the forks of the road an ‘turn dere face eastwards and would pray for the Lord to give ‘them that directional star in their mind that they might be able to get a hold of the luck that would – even if they didn’t have the money , that would give them that trip . An’ ah’ve had them to say that why they shortly after doing that, why they would meet up with some rich person who would wish for them to go as a chauffeur or as a cook or as a maid to such a place , to such a state. And they would go with that person to that state , make a trip jest by going to de cross of the road – dem forks of the road an’ looking eastward and making that prayer while they were standing there looking eastward ,for that luck . [ St . Petersburg , Fla . , (988) , 159 4:2. ]

My summary:
Go to the crossroads and face east. Make a prayer to the Lord to give them that directional star so they could make the journey to where they wanted to go. They would pray for the directional star in their mind that they could get a hold the luck to get that trip.
Afterwards an opportunity would present itself where they would be able to make that journey.

C is for Conjure

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Part of my magical education is in conjure/rootwork/hoodoo/witchcraft (a combination of terms that I take from a series with that title compiled of internviews collected by Harry S Hyatt). I can honestly say I originally came to it back in the early 90’s, mostly in the forms of dollar books about magic, like Marie Laveau’s Black and White Magic and other similar texts. It was also about that time that I first discovered Lucky Mojo and their archives of spells and information, things which amazed me and enchanted me, and also pointed out things like working with Psalms and the bible for magic. Being raised in a thoroughly unusual sect of Christianity that is quite mystical in my opinion, the idea was right on, and I full embraced it.
Later on, much later on, I would find Lucky Mojo again, and memories of it’s first discovery came rushing back to me, and I went to friends that I shared the interest in magic with and I told them “I am going to sign up for Catherine Yronwode’s Correspondence Course” and they said “Oh awesome, we just did, how cool we can work on it together” and I said “WHAT??? You knew about this and you didn’t tell me?!?!?!” and the next day I signed up and everything was awesome. And we would talk about what we read, and what were doing, and where to finds baths, and herbs and everything. It really became the new drink I couldn’t put down, and really still haven’t to this day. It really opened my eyes to a much greater world of magic, of folklore, of herbs then other books, and study had done before.

It also opened my eyes to African American people and culture, and it really made me re-evaluate some of my actions and inner behaviors, that are really just taught across the melting pot of culture in the United States. It set the spark to my flame that wants to know things, to understand things, and see how and where people are coming from, because I just really like to know. I have this thing where I value knowledge for it’s own sake and nothing else. With that in mind, I read other books. I sought out folktales of Southern African Americans, and more of their poetry, both older and perhaps famous, but also contemporary. I read academic publications of people who have researched the interesting and unique combination of folk magic practitioners of African Americans. I set foot in botanicas that are scattered about the Greater Los Angeles area, and became familiar with parts of the African diaspora, so I could learn to identify the difference between a conjure man, and member of an Afro-Caribbean religion, and Mexican folk magic practitioner. I went looking for older pamphlets about spiritual work that are still in print today, because they are regularly popular. During it all I sat down, and I burned candles, and worked with oils, and made incenses and powders and baths from minerals and herbs, and I went to crossroads and gathered graveyard dirt with a dime and bottle of whiskey and I learned to listen to spirits and Spirit.

With all that in mind, I then looked to what seemed to be missing from European stuff (being of European descent) and I found bits and pieces. Reading about hexerei and braucherie, and picking up the Long Lost Friend, and I got into grimories from Europe and made myself read a full translation of the Three Books of Occult Philosophy from cover to cover, reading the footnotes, and looking up terms, and noticing patterns and elements that appeared in the USA among folk magic practitioners, and where they got it, well, they seemed to get it from early merchants of the 20th century whose African American and southern customers who wanted secret symbols, magic squares, blessed salt and john the conqueror roots. I noticed that a lot of herbal folklore was living in Conjure. But yet, it was handled in a unique way. I noticed that in contemporary American alternative spirituality the tools of conjure play and important role, a role that was quickly adopted in the 60’s and 70’s with magic oils, incenses, bathes, washes and colognes with names like “Bend Over” and “Kiss me” but with the neo pagans making their own like “Saturn” and “Goddess” because those neo pagans were hungry for magic and sorcery and witchcraft, and the unique, and the curious, and occult. I think this is a hunger that continues today, which is why people are always finding new ways of doing old things, but also the old ways of doing things, and making all their distinctions, and separate groupings, and traditional crafts, and conure this and hoodoo that because they are curious and hungry for magic. For conjure.