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Last updated: December 7, 2025
There’s something profoundly different about working with runes you’ve made yourself. The purchased set arrives already complete, its journey unknown—who cut the wood, who carved the staves, what energy accumulated during manufacturing and shipping. But runes you craft with your own hands carry your energy from the first moment. Each carving stroke becomes meditation. Each finished rune holds the memory of its making. The connection between rune and reader begins not at first divination but at first creation.
Crafting your own rune set is more accessible than many people think. You don’t need woodworking expertise, expensive tools, or artistic talent. You need materials, patience, intention, and willingness to let imperfection be part of the process. This guide walks you through creating a rune set from start to finish, with options for various skill levels and material preferences.
Choosing Your Material
Runes can be made from nearly any durable material. Each option has advantages worth considering.
Wood
The traditional choice, with deep historical precedent. Wooden runes can be made from branches, dowels, or wood slices. Different trees carry different energies:
- Oak: Strength, endurance, Thor’s sacred tree
- Ash: Yggdrasil’s wood, cosmic connection, Odin’s tree
- Birch: New beginnings, purification, associated with rune Berkano
- Yew: Death and rebirth, ancient wisdom, longevity (caution: yew is toxic; wash hands after handling and don’t put in your mouth)
- Apple: Love, the otherworld, Celtic associations
- Pine: Cleansing, resilience, widely available
- Fruit woods: Various positive associations, often available from pruning
For beginners, wood discs cut from a branch (about 1-2 inches diameter, ½ inch thick) are easiest to work with. These can be purchased pre-cut, found as craft supplies, or made yourself with a saw.
Stone
River stones and beach pebbles make excellent runes. Look for flat, oval stones roughly similar in size. Stone runes are durable, grounding, and connect to earth element. They’re also easier to mark than carve—most people paint symbols on stones rather than trying to carve them.
Clay
Air-dry clay or oven-bake polymer clay allows you to form uniform pieces easily. Roll small balls, flatten into discs, then inscribe symbols before drying/baking. This option requires no carving skill and produces professional-looking results.
Antler or Bone
Traditional materials, but harder to work with and requiring ethical sourcing. Shed antler can be ethically collected and cut into discs. Bone raises more complex questions about sourcing. Both materials connect to animal spirits and ancient traditions.
Crystal
Small tumbled crystals can be painted or engraved with rune symbols. This combines crystal energy with runic energy but typically requires purchasing the base materials.
Gathering Materials
For Wooden Runes from Branches
What you need:
- A branch approximately 1-2 inches in diameter (living or fallen)
- A saw (hand saw, coping saw, or miter saw work well)
- Sandpaper (medium and fine grit)
- Carving tool, wood burning tool, or paint
- Finish (optional): linseed oil, beeswax, or polyurethane
Gathering the branch: If taking from a living tree, ask permission (literally—speak to the tree), take only what you need, and leave an offering (water, a strand of hair, a small stone). Fallen branches work well too, especially if recently fallen. Dried wood is easier to work than green wood.
For Stone Runes
What you need:
- 24 flat stones of similar size (plus a blank if you use one)
- Paint pen, acrylic paint with small brush, or stone engraving bit
- Sealant (Mod Podge, clear coat, or stone sealer)
Gathering stones: Beach combing and river walking are meditative activities that yield excellent rune stones. Look for stones that fit comfortably in your palm, flat enough to lay without rolling, and similar enough to feel unified as a set.
For Clay Runes
What you need:
- Air-dry clay or polymer clay (Sculpey, Fimo)
- Rolling pin or smooth cylinder
- Circular cutter or knife
- Stylus, toothpick, or similar tool for inscribing
- Acrylic paint (optional, for highlighting carved lines)
- Sealant (for air-dry clay) or proper baking (for polymer)
Creating Your Runes: Wood Method
Step 1: Cutting
Mark your branch every ½ inch (or your preferred thickness). Secure the branch firmly—a vice helps but isn’t required. Cut straight across to create discs. You need 24 for the Elder Futhark, plus optionally one blank for the wyrd rune. Cut a few extras in case of mistakes.
Step 2: Sanding
Sand both flat faces of each disc, starting with medium grit (120-150) to remove roughness, then fine grit (220+) to smooth. Sand edges to remove splinters. Some practitioners leave bark on the edges for rustic appearance; others remove it.
Step 3: Marking
Choose your method:
Carving (traditional): Use a sharp knife or carving tool to cut the rune shapes into the wood. This requires some skill but creates the most traditional result. Cut with the grain when possible. Keep cuts shallow—you’re creating grooves, not removing large amounts of wood.
Wood burning (beginner-friendly): A pyrography pen burns the symbols into wood. This is easier to control than carving and creates permanent, attractive marks. Practice on scrap wood first to learn your pen’s behavior.
Painting (easiest): Simply paint the symbols onto sanded wood using acrylic paint or paint pens. Less traditional but completely functional. Red is traditional for rune coloring, but any color works.
Step 4: Coloring (Optional)
Traditionally, runes were colored with red ochre or blood. Modern practitioners typically use red acrylic paint, rubbing it into carved/burned lines and wiping away excess. Some add a drop of their own blood to the paint for personal connection—this is optional and should be done safely if at all.
Step 5: Finishing
Apply finish to protect your runes:
- Linseed oil: Traditional, penetrating finish. Apply, let soak, wipe excess, cure for several days.
- Beeswax: Natural, gentle protection. Rub on, buff with cloth.
- Tung oil: Similar to linseed, natural and penetrating.
- Polyurethane: Modern, durable, but less traditional feel.
Creating Your Runes: Stone Method
Step 1: Preparation
Wash and dry your stones thoroughly. Sort by size and choose the 24 (or 25) most similar. Let them dry completely—paint won’t adhere to damp stone.
Step 2: Marking
Paint pen method: Use a fine-tip paint pen (oil-based works best on stone) to draw each rune symbol. Let dry between coats if needed. This method is simple and produces clear results.
Brush method: Use a small brush and acrylic paint. This allows more control over line width but requires steadier hands.
Engraving method: A rotary tool with stone-engraving bit can carve symbols into soft stones. This creates permanent marks but requires proper tools and practice.
Step 3: Sealing
Protect painted stones with clear sealant—Mod Podge, clear acrylic spray, or stone sealer. Multiple thin coats work better than one thick coat. This prevents paint from wearing off with handling.
Creating Your Runes: Clay Method
Step 1: Forming
Roll clay to approximately ½ inch thickness using a rolling pin (put guides of equal thickness on either side to ensure even rolling). Cut circles using a small cookie cutter, bottle cap, or knife. Make them slightly larger than final size—clay shrinks slightly when drying/baking.
Step 2: Inscribing
While clay is still soft, inscribe rune symbols using a stylus, toothpick, or similar tool. Press firmly enough to create clear lines but not so hard you distort the disc. Smooth edges with slightly damp fingers.
Step 3: Drying/Baking
Follow your specific clay’s instructions. Air-dry clay needs 24-48 hours to fully cure. Polymer clay bakes at low temperature (usually 275°F) for 15-30 minutes per ¼ inch thickness.
Step 4: Finishing
Once cured, you can paint the inscribed lines for visibility, then seal with appropriate finish. Air-dry clay needs sealing for durability; polymer clay can be left as-is or sealed for extra protection.
The Elder Futhark: Reference Guide
Here are the 24 runes of the Elder Futhark in order. When creating runes, work through them sequentially to aid memorization:
Freya’s Aett
- Fehu ᚠ – Looks like F, cattle/wealth
- Uruz ᚢ – Looks like inverted U, aurochs/strength
- Thurisaz ᚦ – Looks like thorn, Thor/protection
- Ansuz ᚨ – Looks like A with arms, Odin/communication
- Raidho ᚱ – Looks like R, riding/journey
- Kenaz ᚲ – Looks like < or torch, knowledge/fire
- Gebo ᚷ – Looks like X, gift/partnership
- Wunjo ᚹ – Looks like P or flag, joy/harmony
Heimdall’s Aett
- Hagalaz ᚺ – Looks like H or N-shape, hail/disruption
- Nauthiz ᚾ – Looks like crossed line, need/constraint
- Isa ᛁ – Simple vertical line, ice/stillness
- Jera ᛃ – Looks like two opposing angles, year/harvest
- Eihwaz ᛇ – Looks like vertical with diagonals, yew/transformation
- Perthro ᛈ – Looks like cup or P-shape, mystery/fate
- Algiz ᛉ – Looks like Y or elk tracks, protection
- Sowilo ᛊ – Looks like lightning or S, sun/victory
Tyr’s Aett
- Tiwaz ᛏ – Looks like arrow up or T, Tyr/justice
- Berkano ᛒ – Looks like B, birch/growth
- Ehwaz ᛖ – Looks like M, horse/partnership
- Mannaz ᛗ – Looks like M with crossed lines, human/self
- Laguz ᛚ – Looks like hook or L, water/intuition
- Ingwaz ᛝ – Looks like diamond or NG, Ing/completion
- Dagaz ᛞ – Looks like hourglass, day/breakthrough
- Othala ᛟ – Looks like diamond with legs, heritage/home
Consecrating Your Runes
Once physically complete, your runes need spiritual activation:
Basic Consecration
- Cleanse: Pass runes through incense smoke, sprinkle with salt water, or leave in moonlight overnight
- Dedicate: Hold the set and state your intention—that these runes will serve as tools for divination and wisdom
- Charge: Leave in sunlight or moonlight, or hold while raising energy through breath and visualization
- Bond: Sleep with runes under your pillow for three nights, or carry them on your person for a week
Traditional Consecration (More Elaborate)
Some practitioners invoke Odin specifically, as he discovered the runes:
- Create sacred space
- Light a candle and incense
- Hold the runes and address Odin, asking his blessing on these tools
- Pass each rune through candle flame (quickly!) while speaking its name
- Anoint each rune with a drop of mead or your own blood
- Close by thanking Odin and the runes themselves
Storing Your Runes
Traditional storage involves a pouch, often made of leather or natural fabric. You can make a simple pouch by:
- Cutting a circle of fabric or leather
- Punching holes around the edge
- Threading cord through the holes to create a drawstring bag
Some practitioners wrap runes in cloth rather than using a pouch. Others keep them in wooden boxes. Choose storage that protects your runes and feels appropriate to their sacred nature.
Beginning Work with Your Runes
Before complex readings, develop relationship with each rune:
- Draw one rune each morning for daily meditation
- Journal about each rune as you encounter it
- Study meanings from multiple sources, then develop personal understanding
- Practice simple spreads (one rune, three rune) before complex layouts
Runes you’ve crafted yourself often speak more clearly than purchased sets—you’ve invested energy, time, and intention into their creation. Honor that investment by developing genuine relationship rather than rushing to use them.
The Gift You Give Yourself
Creating your own rune set takes hours—perhaps a weekend for simple methods, longer for elaborate ones. This time is itself magical. Each rune carved is a meditation on its meaning. Each symbol traced is a lesson retained. By the time you complete your set, you’ve already begun learning the runes simply through creating them.
The runes Odin won came through sacrifice and ordeal. Your own runes, too, require investment—not nine days on a tree, but hours of focused work, attention to detail, and dedication to craft. The runes you create carry that investment forever, ready to speak their ancient wisdom whenever you reach into the pouch and draw forth the messages waiting for you.
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