Join us in the Apothecary for a hands-on Altar Workshop guided by Kat Larson. Together we’ll explore how creating an altar can be a practice of self-awareness, reflection, care, and self-love.
Altars are physical spaces where we bring objects that hold meaning: stones, candles, flowers, photographs, or natural elements like leaves, shells, or feathers. They serve as touchpoints for making intentions, connecting with spiritual guides or ancestors, and cultivating moments of mindfulness in daily life.
Together, we’ll discuss ways to assemble and care for your altar, and explore how simple, tactile rituals can bring grounding, clarity, and meaning to your day-to-day. We’ll invite the elements — earth, air, fire, and water — to guide our practice, and leave with inspiration to create little altars anywhere: on a desk, a windowsill, or a bedside table.
This workshop is for anyone curious about integrating intention, ritual, and connection into everyday life — no experience necessary, just an open heart and hands ready to create.
Logistics
We will meet in the Apothecary and gather around our communal table. Bring a writing utensil and paper to take notes if you desire.
Exchange
$11-22 sliding scale. If cost is a barrier, please send us a note.
Kat Larson
Reiki Master, Healer & Artist
Kat Larson is a healer, witness, and guide whose work bridges the realms of art, ritual, and personal transformation. As a Reiki Master Teacher with deep roots in traditional healing wisdom, Kat offers an approach that is both grounded and intuitive, inviting each person to explore their own capacity for awareness, compassion, and love.
With a background as a fine artist and creative director, Kat brings a refined aesthetic sensibility to her healing work, one that sees beauty as a reflection of spirit and self. In this altar workshop, she invites participants to see the altar as an intimate mirror: a place where self-worth, tenderness, and sacred attention come into focus.
Her practice draws continual inspiration from art, design, travel, culture, and her beloved cat, Mumu Kitty.
Learn more about Kat and her work here.