When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: dua to avoid evil eye jewelry bracelets and earrings for sale

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nazar (amulet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazar_(amulet)

    A Turkish nazar boncuğu Eye beads or nazars – amulets against the evil eyefor sale in a shop.. A naẓar (from Arabic ‏ نَظَر ‎ , meaning 'sight', 'surveillance', 'attention', and other related concepts), or an eye bead is an eye-shaped amulet believed by many to protect against the evil eye.

  3. Nazar battu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazar_Battu

    A Nazar battu (Hindustani: नज़र बट्टू or نظر بٹو) is an icon, charm bracelet, tattoo or other object or pattern used in North India and Pakistan to ward-off the evil eye (or nazar). [1] In Persian and Afghan folklore, it is called a cheshm nazar (Persian: چشم نظر) or nazar qurbāni (Persian: نظرقربانی). [2]

  4. 'Evil eye' jewelry that was used to protect a young girl ...

    www.aol.com/news/evil-eye-jewelry-used-protect...

    Jewelry designed to ward off the “evil eye” and protect a young girl in her passage to the afterlife more than 1,800 years ago has been unveiled in Jerusalem some 50 years after the items were ...

  5. Apotropaic magic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apotropaic_magic

    Eyes were often painted to ward off the evil eye. An exaggerated apotropaic eye or a pair of eyes were painted on Greek drinking vessels called kylikes from the 6th century BCE up until the end of the end of the classical period. The exaggerated eyes may have been intended to prevent evil spirits from entering the mouth while drinking.

  6. The Evil Eye Charm Our Editor in Chief Wears—And Gifts, Too

    www.aol.com/evil-eye-charm-editor-chief...

    Growing up evil eye charms consisted mainly of blue glass beads sold at the Monastiraki Flea Market in Athens. They did not, pardon the pun, catch my eye. The jeweler Ileana Makri changed that ...

  7. Evil eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_eye

    Likewise, the rabbis caution a person not to buy a field that borders a city, unless he were to first build a fence around the field, in order to prevent the bad affects of the evil eye of passers-by. [45] Many observant Jews avoid talking about valuable items they own, good luck that has come to them and, in particular, their children.