
Tag Archives: crafting accessories
CRASPIRE Pendulum Board Review: Right Shop Tool for Us?
We approached the CRASPIRE Pendulum Board kit with equal parts curiosity and skepticism, looking for a practical divination tool rather than just an ornamental altar piece. The 7.9-inch wooden board, carved with a pentagram and classic “yes/no/maybe” cues, feels like it was designed to keep sessions focused—small enough to travel, sturdy enough to stay put. Paired with the rose quartz pendulum, the set leans into a soothing aesthetic that fits Wiccan and metaphysical spaces without demanding them. In our early tests, the pendulum’s swing was responsive, though we learned quickly that lighting, surface stability, and our own steadiness matter as much as the board itself. The real question: does it guide us—or simply mirror us?
Auihiay Keychain Blanks Review: Right Laser Jig Buy?
If we’re hunting for a laser-friendly keychain blank that doesn’t feel flimsy, the Auihiay 25-piece set catches our eye for a simple reason: it’s built for making, not just decorating. Each unfinished wooden tag arrives paired with a leather strap, giving our projects a finished look even before we add a design. The wood surface is clean and ready for engraving, branding, or paint, and the variety in the pack invites quick testing—different layouts, different names, different ideas—without committing to a single style. In this review, we’ll see how these blanks behave under the laser, whether the edges char nicely or need extra sanding, and—most importantly—if they’re the right “jig buy” for our workflow.
Tondiamo Laser Engraving Blanks Kit Review: Our Shop?
In our shop, the fastest way to learn what a laser can really do is to feed it variety—and the Tondiamo 118 Pcs Laser Material Engraving Explore Kit delivers exactly that. We found ourselves jumping from crisp acrylic tags to warm wood coasters, then pivoting to metal pieces that demand slower settings and tighter focus. The PU leather blanks surprised us with clean contrast and a boutique feel, while the rock samples pushed us to experiment with image dithering and deeper passes. Instead of guessing which material to buy next, we used this set like a sampler menu: test, note settings, refine, repeat. It’s not glamorous, but it’s practical—and for us, that’s the point.











