Taoist Collection

$35.00

Authentic Taoist Collection designed to align abundance, clarity, and harmony.
Includes Purifying Incense (Danghui), Wealth Incense, and Five Elements Incense made with natural herbs and traditional formulas.
Features the Auren Seal (Mountain Spirit Coin), a protective Taoist talisman symbolizing stability and warding off misfortune.
Incense Bead Bracelets crafted from incense materials, wearable as jewelry and usable in ritual.
Rooted in Taoist philosophy, emphasizing cleansing before inviting prosperity.
Ideal for ritual essentials, meditation tools, wellness practices, and spiritual protection.

 

Estimated Quantity:  30 sticks
Estimated Burning Time: 30 mins each stick

A Tsha Tsha is not designed to impress—it is designed to carry devotion.

In Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Tsha Tshas are sacred clay votive figures created as offerings, supports for practice, and reminders of protection and compassion. They are often placed on altars, in dedicated spaces, or used in ritual contexts where intention matters more than size. This piece follows that living tradition, combining lineage materials with careful handcraft.

At its heart is sacred earth from Ramba La, traditionally regarded as the abode of Yellow Dzambhala. That earth is combined with mantra-blessed ingredients and holy relic materials to form a consecrated “merit clay.” The figure is then made using traditional Tibetan mold-pressing techniques, preserving classic iconography and proportions. After pressing, it is kiln-fired to strengthen the form while maintaining the character of natural clay.

Each Tsha Tsha is finished by hand-painting, using natural mineral pigments applied by skilled Thangka artists. The result is both devotional and visually refined—colour that feels grounded, not glossy, and detail that honours the sacred image rather than turning it into decoration.

Authenticity in this tradition is not only about materials, but about completion through ritual. Every piece is consecrated and blessed by the monks of Tsangwa Monastery, carried through their practice and care so it can be received as a true ritual object, not a generic souvenir.

Tsha Tshas may be placed in a clean, respectful space—on an altar, in a meditation corner, or anywhere you keep sacred items. Some also offer them as gifts, particularly for new beginnings, protection, or spiritual milestones. When not in use, it is best kept elevated and clean, in keeping with its purpose.

A quiet vessel of tradition—made to be honoured, placed, and returned to.