In a divided field, the upper part is red, and the lower part is blue. Positioned above it is a silver skull without a jaw. Above the skull, two golden stars are arranged horizontally, emerging from the forehead. Below the skull, a silver crescent moon with a face (the eye looking to the left) is depicted. The crest features three golden stars above a helmet without a crown. The mantling on the right side is red, lined with gold, while on the left side, it is blue, lined with silver.
Uniformly blue field. Skull with mandible. Crescent moon with no face, with long arms. Blue flames, lined with silver.
The shield is divided into bands, with the upper field displaying a vivid red hue, bearing a crescent moon with a gleaming silver face. In the lower field, a striking blue is adorned with a left-facing skull, devoid of its mandible.
Above the shield, the helm is embellished with two stars nestled within bands, positioned proudly atop the crown. To the right, flames in crimson, accentuated with delicate golden linings, flicker fiercely. To the left, contrasting flames in azure dance elegantly, adorned with gleaming silver linings.
The basic variant of this coat of arms is well-documented across various sources in both Polish and German heraldry.
It first emerged as early as the Lubino Pomerania map of 1618 (under the name Sdunen), and later featured prominently in publications such as Novo Siebmacherze, in erernicki's (The Polish Nobility, detailing Polish Stem Coats of Arms) and Ostrowski's' "Heraldic Book of Polish Families."
The variant Paraski b Bagmihl is noted in the Pomeranian Heraldic Book, while variant Paraski c comes from the seal of Johann von Janowski from 1778 - probably belonged to Franciszek Ludwig Paraski, and was subsequently used by Janowski as the so-called "friendly seal".