A hardcover guide to the old symbolic world of alchemy, paired with printable alchemical posters for your study, altar, reading nook, or mystical workspace.
Alchemy was never only about changing metal. It was about transformation, matter, mystery, and the strange language carried by symbols. The Modern Mystic’s Guide to Alchemy opens the door into that world, while the Astral Moon Magic poster collection turns its symbols into a visible reference you can return to again and again.
There is a particular kind of curiosity that alchemy awakens. It begins with a symbol you cannot stop looking at, a diagram that feels like a doorway, or a word such as sulfur, salt, mercury, quintessence, prima materia, or Philosopher’s Stone. You may not know exactly what it means yet. But something in it feels charged.
The Modern Mystic’s Guide to Alchemy is written as a field guide into alchemical symbols, substances, tools, vessels, planetary metals, the four elements, the three principles, and the stages of inner transformation.
It is not a chemistry manual. It is a symbolic companion for readers who want to understand what the old images may reveal.
The alchemy posters are designed as visual reference pieces: part study chart, part mystical wall art, part symbolic anchor for your desk, altar, journal corner, or reading space.
They help turn the symbols from something you read once into something you return to.
This guide invites you into the old alchemical imagination: fire and water, sulfur and salt, gold and lead, moon and sun, vessels, tools, strange substances, planetary metals, and the hidden meanings carried by matter itself.
Instead of treating alchemy as a flat symbol list, the book explores each image through history, mysticism, and modern reflection. It helps you understand what the symbol is, how it appeared in older alchemical imagination, and how it can still be read as a meaningful image today.
It is made for readers who love occult symbolism, hermetic philosophy, tarot, astrology, witchcraft, esoteric studies, symbolic art, journaling, spiritual reflection, and mystical history.
This is a doorway into the alchemical language of transformation. It gives structure to the strange beauty of the tradition, so the reader can begin to see how the symbols relate to each other.
Earth, Water, Air, Fire, Sulfur, Mercury, and Salt as symbolic forces within the alchemical imagination.
Gold, Silver, Mercury, Copper, Iron, Tin, and Lead as matter, myth, correspondence, and meaning.
Vessels, substances, seasons, operations, measures, zodiac signs, and the strange images used to describe transformation.
Not only a legendary object, but a symbol of integration, inner coherence, and the completion of the Great Work.
The mysterious fifth essence: the subtle principle that points beyond the four elements.
A grounded way to read alchemical images without treating old beliefs as literal instruction or dangerous experimentation.
Alchemy is visual by nature. The symbols were designed to be looked at, studied, compared, and returned to. The posters are made for the reader who wants the system close: on the wall, beside the journal, near the tarot deck, or inside a personal study space.
A bright, parchment-toned occult study chart for alchemy lovers, symbolism collectors, journaling souls, and mystical interiors.
Use it as a visual reference for elements, principles, metals, vessels, tools, and transformation processes.
A moodier alchemical artwork for readers who want the symbols to feel ceremonial, atmospheric, and visually striking.
Pair it with the guide to create a small alchemical study corner: one part learning, one part atmosphere, one part ritual space.
This collection is for the person who does not want alchemy reduced to a trend. It is for the reader who wants beauty, atmosphere, symbolic depth, and a clear way into a tradition that can otherwise feel strange, fragmented, or impossible to begin.
Where salt remembers the body, fire reveals what must change, mercury moves between worlds, and gold becomes more than metal. Begin with the guide. Keep the symbols close with the poster collection.