Folklor Gallery
whipped husband.tumbex
Kunselman
fuck-toned-get-swole
blonos
grandfather-madara
They Took My Baby!A “Changeling” was a creature from European folklore that took the form of an infa
“Under the apple tree” by Djordje Krstic (1851-1907)
Witch or not, cats love you just the same.Illustration by Arthur Rackham from The Ingoldsby Legends
The Hadassah-Brandeis Institute is proud to present “Ich Bin Di Sitra Achra (I Am the Other)” by Sht
lunchtime sketches!
esaevian:oldmosswoman:Fairy rings occupy a prominent place in European folklore as the location of
Bregol Valon 7 by David DelaGardelle Via Flickr: éala éarendel engla beorhtast / ofer middangeard mo
ohsoromanov:Margarita Kareva bringing Russian fairy tales to life. Follow her mesmerizing work here
My tattoos finally healed! (: Traditional croatian design of the tree of life on the upper back, and
esaevian:rosespirit:esaevian:oldmosswoman:Fairy rings occupy a prominent place in European folklore
tsarevnna:Princess Serenity reimagined in Russian folklore style, by MoonSelena
ohsoromanov:Margarita Kareva bringing Russian fairy tales to life. Follow her mesmerizing work here
lamus-dworski:Legends from the region of Lesser Poland - a master’s degree project by Monika Cecota.
paontaure:Huldra - Art by Theodore Kittelsen
faizhang:philippine mythology & folklore series: the celestial sisters mayari, goddess of the mo
Late for girls nightTwitter | VK | Leave a tip
littlestpersimmon:In Philippine folklore, it was said that the god of voyagers and the sea, Maginda
Rusalka by Boris Olshansky (click to enlarge)
This is a book geared towards 3-5 graders, the paragraphs have lengthy text on them. It is written i
peashooter85:They Took My Baby!A “Changeling” was a creature from European folklore that took the fo
“Grethel and the Witch” illustration by Malcolm Patterson taken from The Home University Bookshelf v
blackinkvoid:Moontoad Magus. A vision caused by the over indulgence of Olde English Scrumpy Cider.
adarkerbeauty:Koschei by ashihmin
enchantedbook:“The Court of Faerie” - Thomas Maybank, 1906
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