Tools Of The Trade

Amulets

Athame (Knife)

Bells

Besom (Brooms)

Black Salt

Boline (White Handled Knife, usually used in harvesting and cutting herbs, inscribing candles with symbols or sigils, or cutting ritual cords.

Book Of Shadows (BOS)

Brooms: (See Besom)

Burin: Tools to carve with.

Candles (Specifically: Blue, Black, White, Green, Red)

Cauldron (In Wicca, it is sometimes used to represent the womb of the Goddess, like the chalice. It is often used for making brews (such as oils), incense-burning, and can be used to hold large, wide pillar candles, depending on how small it is. A fire is often lit within and the flames are leaped over as a simple fertility rite or at the end of a handfasting. If filled with water, a cauldron can be used for scrying. It plays a large role in Celtic magick, taking after Cerridwen's cauldron. Cerridwen was a Celtic goddess who possessed a cauldron that had a brew that took a year and a day to construct).

Censor (For Dispensing Incense)

Chalices and or Drinking Cups e.g., Viking Horns

Cingulum: (In the various forms of  Wicca, cords, known as cingulum, or singulum (which literally translates as "girdle" or "belt"), are worn about the waist by adherents. These are often given to a Wiccan upon their initiation, and worn at each subsequent ritual. Traditionally they are nine feet in length (nine being three times three, the magical number), and are used to measure the circumference of the magic circle so that it can be set up correctly).

In many traditions of Wicca, the color of a person's cingulum indicates what rank of initiation they are; in several Australian covens for instance, green denotes a novice, white denotes an initiate of the first degree, blue for the second, and a plaited red, white and blue for the third, with the High Priest wearing a gold cingulum (symbolizing the sun), and the High Priestess wearing silver (symbolizing the moon).

Wiccan High Priests state that the cingulum should not be worn, but kept especially for spellcraft.

Crystals of Various Types

Herbal Teas

Incense, Burners and Holders

 Jewelry

A selection of jewelry used in Wiccan ritual. Most depict the pentagram.

In various traditions of Wicca, jewelry depicting pentacles and other relevant symbols are sometimes worn, both in ritual, and as an everyday piece of jewelry.

One Gardnerian High Priestess, claimed that when she was initiated into the craft by a another circle, she was naked, but accidentally left her necklace on, only to be told that it was traditional for witches to wear such things.

In traditional forms of Wicca, a necklace is worn by all women within a circle, representing the Circle of Rebirth.

Knife (See Athame)

Oils, Perfume and Cologne

Pendulums

Pentacle or Paten

Robe, Hoodies, Cloaks And Capes

Sage: (Scented Flower Bag)

Scourge (The scourge is used in Wicca to flagellate members of the coven, primarily in initiation rites).

Smudge Stick: (A smudge stick is a bundle of dried herbs, usually bound with string into a small bundle. The herbs are later burned as part of a ritual or ceremony. Plants that are often used include sage and cedar.

Spear: (In the tradition of Seax-Wica, the spear is used as a ritual tool as it is symbolic of the god Woden, who, in that tradition, is viewed as an emanation of God in place of the Horned God. According to Norse mythology, the god Odin, who is the Norse equivalent to the Anglo-Saxon Woden, carried the spear Gungnir).

Statures And Figurines

Sword

Tarot Card Deck

Velveteen Bag For Various Items

Wand