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Bloodletter Digest

Preserved musings, rituals, and echoes from the old world and beyond.

On the Restoration of the Marquis' Comb

Posted: May 3, 2025

A tale of discovery, replication, and resonance. This item was recovered from a private estate and lovingly reproduced in non-ferrous materials.

When the comb of the Marquis de Lune was unearthed from a forgotten estate crypt, our artisans felt an immediate, uncanny pull—an echo of centuries past. Through careful study and ritual-safe metallurgy, we reproduced this relic without a trace of iron or silver, preserving its intricate dignity for modern use. This is the story of its rediscovery, and how an object once thought lost found its voice again.

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Restoration History Toiletry

Moonlit Materials: The Ethics of Sourcing

Posted: April 16, 2025

Transparency in our processes is as vital as moonlight. Learn about our alliances with ethical scavengers and crypt-born miners.

Our commitment to ethical restoration goes far beyond aesthetics. In this piece, we open the veil on how our materials are sourced—from silent crypt-born miners to oath-bound scavengers who honor the boundaries between worlds. In every comb, mirror, and clasp lies a vow: nothing taken without respect, nothing restored without responsibility.

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Ethics Materials Sustainability

Ink That Endures the Ages

Posted: March 29, 2025

We explore our most requested archival ink formula and its success among clients both corporeal and ghostly.

Our archival ink, beloved by living historians and spectral calligraphers alike, has become a standard in documents that must resist time, flame, and forgetting. Here, we explore the evolution of the blend, its enchantment compatibility, and why so many trust it to hold their legacies intact—even after the hand that wrote them has vanished.

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Writing Ink Craftsmanship

The Mirrorless Era: Reflection, Reclamation, Refusal

Posted: April 28, 2025

On the age when glass forgot us - and what we did in return.

Long before modern replications, vampires lived without reflections, both literally and culturally. In this piece, we reflect on the centuries of the mirrorless era - how style, grooming, and identity evolved without self-image—and how today's adaptive tools are not just luxuries, but radical acts of reclamation.

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Mirror Ink Craftsmanship