Carden The Cat Portrait
A motif portrait used in quiet corners of the library. Carden is not a mascot — he is a reminder that rest is part of the system.
This register describes symbolic marks used inside OrdoMotus.Life©. It is intentionally incomplete: some seals exist as private lineage artefacts and are recorded by the archivist, not displayed.
A motif portrait used in quiet corners of the library. Carden is not a mascot — he is a reminder that rest is part of the system.
The glyph of Codex Curiositas — a sign for playful inquiry and calm experimentation, without pressure or persona.
The guild glyph for Codex De Herbis — a header mark for the herbal archive and its practical, historical notes.
The placeholder glyph for Codex Gratus. The entry is recorded in advance so the archive remains coherent as the mark is forged.
The glyph of Codex Legatum — used to mark pages concerned with inheritance, remembrance, and the dignity of what endures.
The glyph of Codex Nutritionis — used for pages concerned with nourishment, fundamentals, and the long arc of vitality.
The guild glyph for Codex Runarum — used as a header mark to signal the runic archive and its reflective paths.
The hall glyph — used as a navigational mark for the seals and symbols archive, where visual language is recorded without claims.
The mark of My Codex — a visitor’s private space for keys, saved paths, and the quiet return to what matters.
A preserved legacy seal from the TheGymMouse.Life© era — retained as a continuity artefact within the Ordo Motus archive.
A portrait motif used sparingly to mark founder-authored pages. Included for context, not for status.
The glyph of The Green Muse Annals — marking narrative herbal entries, field notes, and the quieter lore behind plants.
A motif portrait used to signal the Green Muse presence across herb and field-note paths — narrative, not authority.
The Rings are the visible mark of Ordo Motus — continuity, discipline, and return through motion.
A future-facing origin seal intended for visitor adaptation within Seal Forge. Recorded now to preserve lineage and naming continuity.
Some marks are recorded but never displayed. The register acknowledges their existence without exposure.
The archivist maintains full technical metadata privately. This page shows only the public-facing layer.