Tea & Rosemary
Call Your Coven Spell Candle
Call Your Coven Spell Candle
Couldn't load pickup availability
Call in your people.
Your coven, your circle, the closest friends you haven't met yet.
Each candle is hand-dressed at my altar in Salem, Massachusetts, with an orange flower, calendula, and citrine.
Think of the sorts of people you want to call in, light it, and boom: you've just cast the spell.
The particulars.
- 9oz soy wax in an amber glass jar
- Topped with an orange flower, calendula, and citrine (yours is chosen individually — no two look alike)
- Unscented: clean burning soy with nothing synthetic to compete with the spell
- Printed card with the spell and how to activate it in 15 seconds
Hand-charmed in small batches in Massachusetts. Ships within 3-5 business days. Natural variations in appearance are part of what makes each candle unique.
Share

Collapsible content
How To Light Your Candle
Put the candle somewhere warm and welcoming. Read the card — it takes about 15 seconds. Light the wick and let the spell do its thing.
You can burn it all in one sitting or over a few. The spell is already cast (that's my job). You're just opening the door.
Questions I Get A Lot
Do I have to believe in magic for this to work?
Nope. The spell is already cast — belief isn't a required ingredient.
Is this safe for kids and pets?
The base is fine: soy wax, cotton wick, no fragrance oils, no toxic anything. But, I recommend no snacking on the decorations (looking at you, curious cat).
How long does it burn?
About 50–60 hours.
Do you make other spell candles?
Many. Here's the full shelf.
Meet The Witch
I'm Alex, a witch living in the woods outside Salem. On any given day, you'll find me charming candles at my altar, talking to the crows out the kitchen window, or explaining to my husband why I used all his good whisky for an offering.
I've been practicing for fifteen years in a wildly chaotic, allergic-to-rules sort of way.
I make these candles because I believe in reclaiming the old ways. Every one is charmed on my altar before it ships, in small batches, by hand.