If you are looking for "vulgar" or "nasty" witchcraft—meaning practical, no-holds-barred magic for everyday problems—several authors provide direct, unsanitized instructions: The Little Black Book of Nasty Spells
The Vulgar Witch also rejects the false binary of "sacred sexuality." She is not performing a tantric ritual in silk sheets. She is having messy, loud, sometimes awkward sex, and she will use the resulting fluids in a love spell (or a revenge hex, depending on the morning after). The vulgar witch knows that the body is not a temple; it is a workshop. And workshops get dirty. The Vulgar Witch
The Vulgar Witch is not for the soft. She does not heal. She does not "manifest abundance." She survives. She wrecks her enemies. She drinks from the skull of polite society. If you are looking for "vulgar" or "nasty"
It is a practice of liberation. It tells us that we are "enough" exactly as we are—messy, loud, and unpolished. Our magic doesn't require us to be "pure" or "perfect" because nature itself isn't sanitized. It’s compost, it’s storms, and it’s the cycle of decay and rebirth. Embracing Your Inner Vulgarity And workshops get dirty
due to its CGI effects and "uncanny valley" character designs [17]. The Witches of Moonshyne Manor : Reviews on The StoryGraph specifically mention the book feeling “the wrong side of vulgar”