Feng Shui Colors: Home vs What You Wear
Red on a wall and red on a scarf share a color word but not always the same story. Compare feng shui color sectors at home with five-phase palettes on ties, bags, and hair accessories, with Amazon bundles.
Guides
Curated wearables with symbolism explained — no shop pressure.
Red on a wall and red on a scarf share a color word but not always the same story. Compare feng shui color sectors at home with five-phase palettes on ties, bags, and hair accessories, with Amazon bundles.
Feng shui talks about Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water in rooms through color, shape, and material, not just bead bracelets. Compare environmental five phases with what you wear on scarves, bags, and shoes.
Your Kua (Ming Gua) number groups birth years into east or west direction families in feng shui vocabulary. Learn the calculation, what directions symbolize, and how to gift color with context.
The bagua overlays eight trigrams and compass directions onto space, a symbolic map from the I Ching tradition. Learn the vocabulary and see how direction motifs appear on scarves, bags, and jewelry.
Feng shui is the Chinese art of reading how people relate to place, wind, water, direction, and symbol. This beginner guide separates it from BaZi and five elements, and points to wearable color stories.
Mallria wearables are more than bracelets — hair clips, scarves, bags, ties, and shoes can all carry five-element or zodiac color stories. This guide defines the full scope and maps Eastern and Western element languages to everyday gifts.
The public yellow calendar shows the same Yi/Ji for everyone; a personal BaZi calendar needs your birth pillars. Here is how they differ and when Mallria uses each layer.
Your sun sign is only one third of the beginner story — what the Moon and Rising mean, why birth time matters, and how that connects to wearable gifts.
What changes when you add birth time — sun sign only, five-planet profile, full chart, or four pillars, and what Mallria match flow does with each level.
A practical color map for Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water on wrists, hair, and silver, with example wearables.
Yi (宜) and Ji (忌) on a Chinese almanac are the same for everyone that day — how to read them, and how that differs from a personal BaZi calendar.
What Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water mean in Chinese tradition, where the idea comes from, what it is not, and how five-element color stories land on wearable gifts.