Seasonal Altars

A Ritual Series Rooted in the Wheel of the Year

Seasonal Altars gathers Honey Jaeger’s witchy, pagan-inspired works rooted in ritual, symmetry, mortality, and the turning of the year. Drawing from the Wheel of the Year, these pieces transform bones, moths, roses, crystals, wings, flowers, and sacred symmetry into symbolic altar objects rather than literal seasonal scenes.

The series began with Ostara, an early ritual composition that now finds its full cycle alongside Litha, Mabon, and Yule. Together, the works trace the movement of the seasons through emergence, fullness, harvest, darkness, death, rest, and return.

These pieces are devotional without being doctrinal, reverent without asking permission. In Honey’s hands, beauty and mortality are not opposites... they are part of the same spell. Wings bloom from bone, crystals rise like frozen light, and flowers mark both abundance and decay. Each work becomes an offering to the cycle itself: the old magic of endings feeding beginnings.