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Faerie Artwork
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Faery Legends is all about Celtic media including
books, cards, calendars, artwork, and more, but we specialize in
wizards, warriors, dragons, faeries, elves, and all the magical realms
of these legendary characters. We only publish the finest works of
excellence, and we stand behind our products.
If you have a passion for wizards, warriors, dragons, elves, fairies,
dwarves (dwarfs), mermaids, and/or all of the other mystical Celtic
creatures, this is the best place to find them. Click on the Buy Now Button to be transported to our New Shopping System.
From there you can click on the back button to return here or use the New
system to continue your Shopping trip. |
Amerach Print
$18.00US
(pronounced SHAY-mon) Amerach was a Druid
priestess, a shaman, and a wizard from Ulster. She could
manipulate time, control the stars, and make humans (and faes)
immortal. And although fairies live a very long time, if they
choose to live and play in the human worlds, they do, eventually
die. Amerach is pictured here consulting the stars in her
magic nebula. Like the amulets and talismans from fairy tales, she
drew her strength and power from this nebula and walked on a beam
of starlight to reach its borders. She always carries her magic
crystal mounted in the top of her staff wand and wears a band of
gold on her brow to keep other seers from reading her mind. Her
violet dress is woven from beams of starlight and her wings are
fairy duplicates of bat wings. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Anu Print
$18.00US
Anu was a virgin fairy goddess known as a triune or
triple goddess. These fairies were also immortal, but aged from virgin
maidens to mothers, to crones and were then reborn to forever repeat
this cycle. Anu’s mother aspect (other self) was Dana, the first great
mother goddess of Ireland. Read more about Anu on the story card that
comes with this beautiful photographic portrait.
Available in
8x10 Format.
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Bri Print
$18.00US
Bri was a Tuatha De Danann princess/queen and the
daughter of King Midhir and Queen Fuamnach. Bri and her sister
Blathnat were born and raised in Tir Tairngiri, the Land of
Promise, but later relocated with their father to his crystal
mansion in the fairyland burgh called Bri Leith. Bri was the
eldest sister, so she inherited the throne when her father and
mother abdicated, but she always shared the sovereignty of her
kingdom with her baby sister Blathnat, who was one of the flower
faes. She loved a Tuatha De Danann Prince named Liath, but they
never married because her father’s guards would not let him enter
Bri Leith. Read more about Bri on the story card that comes with
this beautiful photographic portrait. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Clionda Print
$18.00US
(pronounced klee-ODE-nah) Cliodna was a Tuatha De Danann
fairy goddess of the sea. She was called “Cliodna of the fair hair,”
because of her beautiful blonde mane and fair skin, a common trait
shared by most all of the Tuatha De Danann. She was known as “the most
beautiful female in the world” and had many lovers, most of them mortal.
Read more about Cliodna on the story card that comes with this beautiful
photographic portrait. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Feithline Print
$18.00US
(pronounced
FATE leen)
Feithline was a prophet/seer (aka wizard) from Tir na mBan (TEER
naw vawn); aka, the Land of Women, one of the many Otherworld
realms of the Celtic fairies. She often visited the mundane realm
of mortals to share her prophecies with the humans. Unfortunately,
her messages were usually dark, foretelling death, war, and
destruction. Pictured here with the sphere of destiny, the famous
“crystal ball” that she used to divine future events, legends
boast that Feithline’s prophecies were never wrong. Read more
about Feithline on the story card that comes with this beautiful
photographic portrait. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Four
Kingdoms Print $18.00US
The 4 Magic Kingdoms (or mythical cities) of the Tuatha
De Danann Falia (north), Findias (south), Gorias (east), & Murias (west)
pronounced FAL-lee-ugh (rhymes with pal-see-a)
FIN-dee-us (rhymes with win-see-bus) GOR-ree-us (rhymes with
more-see-bus) & MURE-ree-us (rhymes with pure-see-bus) When the Tuatha
De Danann landed on the mountaintop in Connacht, they brought four
magical treasures with them; one from each of the four mythical cities,
or Magic Kingdoms, of their world. These treasures were enchanted (or
charmed) by the master wizard of each kingdom. See the story card on the
back of each portrait to read more about the Four Magic Kingdoms. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Queen
Onaugh Print $18.00US
(pronounced
OH-naw) Queen Onaugh and King
Finvara were rulers of the Tuatha De Danann sidhe (pronounced she)
at the burgh now called Knockma. Finvara was famous for his skill
at the game called fidchell (an early game of chess) and his
fascination with mortal women. Onaugh was also a Munster fairy
queen and the legends claim that her beautiful golden hair was so
long, it touched the ground when she walked (which is why she
often walked on her toes like a dancer). Read more about
Onaugh on the story card that comes with this beautiful
photographic portrait. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Plur
na mBan Print $18.00US
(pronounced
plur
naw VAWN)
Plur na mBan means “woman of flowers.” She
was born in Tir na nOg, land of the forever young, an Otherworld realm
where no one ever gets sick, old, or dies, and time passes very slowly.
Plur na mBan’s mother was Niamh of the Golden Hair, a fairy goddess who
escorted dying warriors to Tir na nOg and daughter of the sea god Manann
MacLir, See the story card on the back of this portrait for more about
this flower maiden. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Queen
Maeve Print $18.00US
Queen Maeve is the Irish equivalent of the Welsh
fae Queen Mabb. She was the
queen of Connacht, had many lovers, and many
husbands. Her first husband was Conchobar Mac Nessa of Ulster, but
she quickly tired of him and passed him on to her sister Ethne.
Then she married a Connaught chieftain named Ailill (AW-leel),
also a disaster. Next, she married a prince (another Ailill—Prince
Ailill MacMata), the son of the King of Leinster.
She had long, golden hair and steel blue-gray eyes
(a common trait shared by all the Tuatha de Danann). She was
strong, willful, stubborn, and very powerful, but also very
beautiful, an intoxicating beauty that mesmerized men into
following her anywhere, even into battle. Read more about Queen
Maeve on the story card that comes with this beautiful
photographic portrait. Available in
8x10 Format.
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Uairebhuidhe Print
$18.00US
(pronounced
Y’air-BOO-ee)Uairebhuidhe was the fairy
goddess and guardian protector of all birds (aka, the bird goddess). The
ancient Celts believed that birds represented the transition from the
human world to the Otherworld (i.e., the Celtic Land of the Dead), where
they were reborn after death. Sacred birds such as the owl, the eagle,
and the blackbird carried the souls of mortals to various Otherworld
realms such as Tir na nOg, Tir na mBeo, Tir na mBan, and Tir Tairngiri. Available in
8x10 Format.
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