Description
Morgelyn: The Oracle of the Seven Stones
The First of the High Sisterhood: Legends
“I do not speak for the forest, but for the kingdom that the waves forgot.”
While the standard Sisterhood Fairies tend to the quiet moss and hidden glens, Morgelyn emerges from the deepest layers of Cornish history and myth. As the first of the High Sisterhood: Legends, she represents a significant “level up” in detail, narrative weight, and elemental power. She is a seer of the deep, a guardian of the granite coast.
The Legend of Lethowsow
Morgelyn is the bridge between the rugged cliffs of West Penwith and the fabled sunken kingdom of Lethowsow (Lyonesse). She stands watch over the Seven Stones, the treacherous reef where a great land once flourished. While the world above has moved on, Morgelyn listens—tuning her spirit to the ghost-bells of the 140 churches lost to the tide centuries ago.
Artisan Details & Craftsmanship
This figure is a one-of-a-kind (OOAK) art piece, meticulously crafted with premium materials and layered textures:
-
The Scepter of the Deep: Her staff is a unique piece of weathered wood, hand-wrapped in copper wire. This is a symbolic tribute to the historic tin and copper mines of Penwith that tunneled for miles beneath the sea floor—where miners worked within earshot of the Atlantic boulders crashing on the seabed above.
-
The Crown of the Deep: Her structured hat features a lush crown of hand-dyed teal curls and “sea-foam” wool fibers. It is adorned with two hand-selected seashells—a spotted cowrie and a pearlescent white shell—nestled into the brim.
-
The Great Shell of Echoes: In her hand, she cradles a significant spiraling shell. In Cornish legend, it is said that if you listen closely to an Oracle’s shell, you hear not the sea, but the voices of the ancestors from the sunken city.
-
The Blue Hour Gown: Her raiment is a layered masterpiece of midnight blue, indigo, and teal wools. It is finished with a deliberate, ethereal wispiness that mimics the movement of breaking waves and coastal mist at twilight.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.