Feng Shui Ornaments

Feng Shui Ornaments

Enter the room facing and size. Combining house flying stars, annual afflictions and each occupant's chart, it tells you what to place in which corner, why, and which one first.

Content is based on traditional feng shui culture and is for entertainment and cultural reference only, not scientific advice.

Stand at the room center, face the main orientation (usually toward the door or main window). 0° is due north, increasing clockwise.

NSWE

Used to determine the period for the house flying star chart; use the latest major renovation or move-in year.

×

A rectangular approximation is fine; used to locate the room center and the eight sector boundaries.

N
NE
E
SE
S
SW
W
NW

If the room is not a standard rectangle, mark the direction with a missing corner or protrusion; leave empty otherwise.

Occupant 1

Used to compute ming gua, eight-mansion roaming stars, and Wenchang/Taohua/noble positions. Hour is optional; omitting it does not affect the ming gua result.

Each occupant's eight-mansion stars and personal noble positions are computed independently; no merged score.

Room-Centric Chart

The chart is cast from the room's own center using 45° radial sectors — no need for the whole building's facing data.

Annual Afflictions Tagged

Tai Sui, Wu Huang, San Sha and An Jian Sha are auto-tagged: remedy only, never activate, so wealth items are never misplaced there.

Per-Person Layers

Each occupant's ming gua, roaming stars and noble positions are computed separately and shown side by side — no merged score.

Ornament Rule Base

Five-element gaps are judged deterministically by the rule base; AI only picks concrete items within the judged framework.