Prosperity & Wealth
招財 · Prosperity

Prosperity & Wealth

Pieces written in the old grammar of abundance — for people who already work hard, and who would simply like the world to meet them halfway.

About this collection

About This Collection

This collection draws inspiration from traditional Chinese symbols associated with prosperity, opportunity, and abundance. Through carefully selected crystals, symbolic objects, and cultural motifs, it explores the enduring relationship between intention, growth, and good fortune.

The story

Inspired by traditional Chinese symbols of opportunity, stewardship, and prosperity.

In the Chinese tradition, prosperity is not accumulation but circulation — wealth that moves, returns, and renews. The pixiu, the coin, the gourd: each is a small architecture for that circulation. To wear a symbol of prosperity is less about luck than about intention — a daily reminder of the work, patience, and stewardship that make abundance possible.

This collection draws on those symbols with editorial restraint. No charms, no kitsch — only quiet pieces designed to be worn in boardrooms, at desks, and across the long arc of a career.

Traditional associations

Traditional Associations

Associated Themes
Prosperity, Opportunity, Growth
Traditional Symbols
Pixiu, Coins, Wealth Vessels
Recommended For
Career development, business growth, financial goals
The pieces

Objects in this tradition.

Each piece is made to be lived with — story and symbol first, commerce second.

From The Journal

The thinking behind the pieces.

Topics our editors explore alongside the Prosperity & Wealth collection — gathered into The Journal as essays arrive.

Explore The Journal →
  • Prosperity · Topic

    What Is Pixiu?

    On the small mythical creature that has guarded Chinese treasuries for two millennia.

  • Prosperity · Topic

    Chinese Wealth Symbols

    A short reading of the coins, gourds, and creatures of the abundance tradition.

  • Prosperity · Topic

    Wealth and Stewardship in Chinese Tradition

    Why classical thinkers framed prosperity as something one tends — not something one keeps.

Continue exploring

Related Paths

Discover readings, traditions, and journal insights connected to the Prosperity & Wealth collection.