Wands And Their Lore

This is a book about wands, their meanings as far as their woods, and their cores, and their length and flexibility.
Thsi will soon be a one stop shop. If you wish to buy any wands with some of these woods, look on Etsy and look for Orchard Works. I myself have a wand of Cherry, eleven inches, with unicorn tail core.

Last Updated

05/31/21

Chapters

14

Reads

2,705

Flexibility

Chapter 6

   The flexibility of a wand is generally a measurement of its willingness to work for its chosen Witch or Wizard. A witch with a whippy wand might learn spells faster than a wizard with a rigid wand, but the wizard with a rigid wand will have more spell strength once he finally masters it. Rigid and inflexible wands are the hardest to master, but dependent on their core and wood, can be the most powerful. There is also an element of material inherent- it is rare to find a whippy mahogany wand or a stiff reed wand.

The scale, from speed to strength:
whippy < easiest to learn and cast, least powerful

swishy

flexible

springy

sturdy

inflexible


unyeilding < hardest to learn and cast, most powerful


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