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Go to the shopFeng Shui Talisman Tape
Fortune flows where intention goes.
The Three Lucky Gods, the Five Blessings, and the words that shape good qi — woven into kinesiology tape for balanced movement.
The Feng Shui Talisman is the wearable form of Chinese metaphysical tradition — the art of arranging environment, body and intention to harmonise with the flow of qi, the life energy that animates everything. At its heart are three of the most beloved characters in the Chinese language: Fu, Lu and Shou, the Three Star Gods of fortune, who together cover the full sweep of a good life.
Around them sit the Five Blessings — Wu Fu — the ancient catalogue of what makes a complete human life. And alongside, in English, a set of keywords that bridge traditions: Hope, Faith, Truth, Life, Live, Heal.
This is the talisman for harmony. For balance. For movement that flows instead of forcing.
Feng Shui — literally "wind and water" — is the Chinese art of arranging environment to encourage the favourable flow of qi, the life force that animates all things. Practised for at least three thousand years, it shapes the orientation of homes, the placement of objects, the timing of events and the design of cities. At its core is the same belief that runs through every tradition on the Talisman Collection: that arrangement matters, intention matters, and the symbols you live among shape the life you live.
The Three Star Gods — Sanxing — are the most beloved characters in Chinese folk religion. Fu Xing, the god of good fortune, is shown in flowing robes with a child in his arms. Lu Xing, the god of prosperity and rank, holds the symbols of high office. Shou Xing, the god of longevity, has an enormous high forehead and carries the peach of immortality. Together they cover the three things the Chinese tradition believes make a complete life: fortune, success and long life. You see them on doors, on shrines, on gifts, on red envelopes at New Year.
The Five Blessings — Wu Fu — come from the Book of Documents, one of the oldest Chinese classical texts. They are: long life, good health, wealth, virtue, and a peaceful death in old age. To wish someone Wu Fu is to wish them the complete arc of a well-lived life. The character Fu — 福, good fortune — has been hung on doors at New Year for at least two thousand years, often deliberately upside down because the Chinese word for "upside down" sounds the same as "arrives": fortune arrives.
The English keywords on this design — Hope, Faith, Truth, Life, Live, Heal — were chosen deliberately as a bridge between traditions. The Chinese metaphysical tradition has never been afraid to absorb what was useful from other systems. The keywords are the same intention in a different tongue.
Wu Fu — the Five Blessings: long life, good health, wealth, virtue, and a peaceful death. — Book of Documents, c. 6th century BCE.
What we've done is take the most concentrated symbols of Chinese fortune and harmony and put them on the body, where qi flows. The Feng Shui Talisman is for the people who train and live by the principle that energy follows intention.
The Feng Shui Talisman centres on the three most beloved characters in the Chinese language — Fu, Lu and Shou — framed by the Five Blessings and complemented by English-language keywords for cross-cultural intention.
Fu — 福 — Good Fortune
Good luck, fortune, blessings, happiness. The most common character on Chinese New Year decorations, hung often upside down so fortune "arrives."
Lu — 祿 — Prosperity
Prosperity, rank, official influence. The reward of work well done and position fairly earned.
Shou — 壽 — Longevity
Long life, good health, the years stretching ahead. The character associated with the peach of immortality.
Long Life — First Blessing
The full arc of years. Time enough to learn, raise, build, give back.
Good Health — Second Blessing
The body that carries you through those years. The foundation everything else rests on.
Wealth — Third Blessing
Material sufficiency. The freedom to act, to give, to take risks worth taking.
Virtue — Fourth Blessing
The love of moral character. The blessing that completes the others — long life and wealth without virtue is hollow.
Peaceful Death — Fifth Blessing
To die in old age, surrounded by family, having completed the arc. The hardest blessing to ask for, and the truest.
Hope — The Forward Look
The conviction that what comes next can be better than what came before.
Faith — The Steady Belief
Trust in the process, the practice, the people, the path you are on.
Truth — The Honest Standard
The willingness to see clearly, to speak plainly, to live by what is real.
Life — What You Have
The given. The single, finite, miraculous fact of being here at all.
Live — What You Do
The verb form of the noun. The active claiming of the gift.
Heal — What You Become
The body and the spirit restored. The closing of the wound. The return to wholeness.
This is the talisman for balance. It belongs on the practice that values flow over force — tai chi, qigong, yoga, breathwork. It belongs on the days you want to set intention rather than chase output. It belongs on the recoveries that ask for patience.
Apply it along the meridians — down the inside of an arm, along the line of a leg, across a shoulder before practice. Let the character do its quiet work while you do yours.
Available in Black, vertical and horizontal layouts. Each pack contains 20 pre-cut strips with a built-in dispenser.
Talisman Collection
Explore all five traditions — Viking, Chakra, Dreamcatcher, Latin, Feng Shui.
View the full collection Shop talisman tapeWorn with intention. Designed with meaning. The symbols on these designs draw on Chinese metaphysical tradition, the Three Star Gods of fortune, and the Five Blessings — they carry the meanings their cultures have given them for centuries. Wear them as a personal reminder, a focus for ritual or training, or simply for their beauty. Underneath the artwork sits the same medical-grade 95% Rayon / 5% Spandex kinesiology tape engineered for 5–7 day wear, sweat resistance and proprioceptive support. We don't claim the symbols themselves heal — we believe the intention you bring to them matters.