Hey everyone,
A lot of traditional grimoires and systems demand highly specific, expensive, or hard to find physical tools, like virgin parchment, pure beeswax candles, or specific metals.
For those of you getting consistent, real world results: what are your favourite "mundane" or budget substitutes that actually work just as well as the traditional gear? Do you use printer paper instead of parchment? Normal kitchen herbs instead of exotic resins?
In my experience, the real issue is not whether the substitute is “cheap” or “expensive,” but whether it preserves the function of the original item inside the ritual structure.
For example, I have no problem using good quality printer paper instead of virgin parchment when the purpose is simply to carry a written name, seal, prayer, petition, or intention. If the work demands permanence, I may use heavier paper, cotton paper, or handmade paper, but I do not think parchment is always necessary.
The same applies to candles. Pure beeswax is beautiful and carries a very specific traditional symbolism, but a clean, dedicated candle of the right color or purpose can work perfectly well. What matters more to me is that the candle is set apart for the operation, prayed over, and not treated as ordinary household decoration.
For herbs and resins, I tend to think in terms of correspondence rather than rarity. If I cannot find a specific resin, I look for something that carries a similar planetary, elemental, or symbolic quality. Frankincense, myrrh, rosemary, bay leaf, cinnamon, basil, salt, olive oil, wine, water, and common kitchen herbs can cover a surprising amount of ritual ground when used with understanding.
Metals are similar. If a grimoire calls for a specific planetary metal and I cannot obtain it, I may use paper, wood, clay, wax, or a more accessible metal, then consecrate it according to the planetary force being invoked. The material is important, but the consecration, timing, prayer, intention, and spiritual authority behind the work are usually more important.
My general rule is this: do not substitute randomly. Understand why the original material was required, then choose something that fulfills the same symbolic and ritual role. A substitution made with knowledge is very different from a substitution made out of laziness.
So yes, I use printer paper, common candles, kitchen herbs, and simple oils when necessary. But I try to compensate with better preparation, cleaner ritual space, stronger prayer, clearer intention, and more precise timing. Traditional tools are powerful, but the operator’s understanding is what makes them alive.