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Go to the shopDreamcatcher Talisman Tape · Beige Vertical
Protection. Honour. Spirit.
The Ojibwe dreamcatcher and sacred symbols — wear what watches over you.
The Dreamcatcher Talisman is built around the most recognisable protective symbol on earth. Born in Ojibwe (Anishinaabe) tradition as a sleep amulet that catches bad dreams in its web and lets good dreams pass through, the dreamcatcher has become a near-universal symbol of guardianship. Around it sit eagles, thunderbirds, the white buffalo and the Great Spirit — the visible language of Native American cosmology — alongside complementary symbols from Adinkra and Cherokee traditions.
This is the beige vertical layout: a warm neutral tone that blends with most skin tones for a discreet wear, with the web, feather and arrow running down the length of the strip, the way a dreamcatcher itself hangs.
The dreamcatcher was first made by the Ojibwe people of the Great Lakes. A spider-woman figure, Asibikaashi, watched over the children. As the nation spread too far for her to reach every cradle, mothers and grandmothers began weaving small hoops of willow with sinew webs to hang above the sleeping child — the web caught bad dreams and held them until the morning sun burned them away. Through the central hole, the good dreams could slip down the feather and reach the dreamer.
Around this central image, the design carries a wider circle of Native American sacred figures: the Eagle, courier between earth and Creator; the Thunderbird, great spirit of the upper world; the White Buffalo, holy beyond words in Lakota tradition. It also nods to the Adinkra symbols of West Africa and a Cherokee water glyph — reminders that protection, like water and air, belongs to no one and is shared by all.
The central dreamcatcher anchors a wider circle of protective and ceremonial figures.
The Dreamcatcher
Catches bad dreams and negative thoughts in its woven web; allows good dreams to slip through the centre and travel down the feather to the dreamer. The most widely worn Native American protective symbol.
The Eagle
Courage, wisdom and strength. The messenger between humans and the Creator. To see an eagle is to receive a message from above.
Thunderbird
Power, protection and strength. A great spirit of the upper world. Its wings make thunder; its eyes flash lightning. It brings the storms that water the earth.
White Buffalo
Sacred knowledge and spiritual power. In Lakota tradition, the White Buffalo Calf Woman brought the sacred pipe and the seven sacred ceremonies. The rare appearance of a white buffalo calf is a sign of profound blessing.
Great Spirit
Wakan Tanka in Lakota, Gitche Manitou in Algonquian. The supreme being, the source of all that is, always watching.
Morning Star
Tradition, resurrection and the dawning of a new day. A symbol carried across many Plains nations — hope held in the form of light.
Feather
Honour and the bond between owner, Creator and bird. Eagle feathers in particular are sacred items not granted lightly — they mark service, courage or ceremonial role.
Beads
The stars and the moon woven into the design. In some traditions, each bead marks one of the good dreams caught and held; in others, the wishes of the dreamer.
Downward Arrow
Peace. An arrow pointing down is the universal Plains symbol for “I come in peace” — the warrior has lowered the weapon.
Nteasee — Adinkra symbol (West Africa)
Understanding and cooperation. An Akan Adinkra symbol carried over from the wisdom traditions of West Africa — a reminder that protection is collective.
Cherokee Water Glyph
Water that nourishes all life. In Cherokee cosmology, water carries memory and blessing — the river is teacher and ancestor.
Balance — concentric ring
Peace and harmony. The ring around the design represents the unbroken wholeness that protection seals.
The vertical layout is designed to be read top-to-bottom — the dreamcatcher web above, the feather and arrow trailing down — so it sits beautifully along the spine, down the length of an arm or leg, or down the front of the chest. Apply to clean dry skin, round the corners of each pre-cut strip, then rub the tape briskly to activate the adhesive.
Worn with intention. Designed with meaning. The symbols on this design draw on Ojibwe (Anishinaabe), Lakota, wider Native American and West African Adinkra traditions — they carry the meanings their cultures have given them for centuries. Wear them as a personal reminder, a focus for ritual or meditation, or simply for their beauty. Underneath the artwork sits the same medical-grade 95% Rayon / 5% Spandex kinesiology tape engineered for 5–7 day wear, sweat resistance and proprioceptive support. We don't claim the symbols themselves heal — we believe the intention you bring to them matters.
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