Shri Yantra — Hand-Engraved Copper 4-inch, Vastu Placement Ready
- Wealth magnetism — The 43 sub-triangles encode the geometric ratio of cosmic abundance; Lakshmi energy is drawn to the bindu and radiates outward through the lotuses
- Vastu correction — Neutralises north-east doshas (negative energy zones); installation in Ishana balances the prana flow across the entire home
- Career and business growth — Used by Indian merchants for over a thousand years to attract new clients, contracts, and revenue streams
- Mental clarity and focus — Daily gazing at the bindu trains attention; meditation on the yantra is a classical Sri Vidya sadhana for awakening higher consciousness
- Family harmony — Shiva-Shakti union at the heart of the yantra harmonises masculine-feminine energies in the household, reducing conflict and increasing mutual respect
About this piece
The Shri Yantra (Sanskrit: Shri Chakra, "auspicious wheel") is the master yantra of the Sri Vidya tantric tradition and represents Tripura Sundari, the supreme goddess of beauty, abundance, and cosmic union. Its sacred geometry is built from nine interlocking triangles — four upward-pointing triangles (Shiva, the masculine principle) intersecting five downward-pointing triangles (Shakti, the feminine principle) — which together generate 43 smaller sub-triangles arranged in five concentric levels around a central bindu, the cosmic point of pure potential. The triangles are surrounded by an eight-petal lotus (ashta-dala), a sixteen-petal lotus (shodasha-dala), and a square bhupura with four T-shaped gates facing the cardinal directions. Copper, used here for its high spiritual conductivity, amplifies the yantra's vibrations. Place in the north or north-east (Ishana) zone of the home or pooja room. Hand-engraved in Jaipur and energised on Purnima with the Sri Sukta and 108 repetitions of the Sri Vidya beej mantra.
Specifications
How to wear
Install in the north-east (Ishana) corner of your pooja room or living area at eye level on a clean red or yellow cloth. Face the yantra east while worshipping. Light a ghee lamp and incense daily. Chant "Om Shreem Hreem Shreem Kamale Kamalalaye Praseed Praseed Shreem Hreem Shreem Mahalakshmiyei Namah" 11 or 108 times each morning after bathing. Friday is the most powerful day for Shri Yantra puja. Offer red flowers, kumkum, and white sweets. Re-energise monthly under the full moon by leaving overnight in soft moonlight.
Frequently asked
How do I identify a hand-engraved yantra vs a machine-stamped one?
Hold the yantra at an angle under a lamp. Hand-engraved lines have a V-shaped cut with slight variation in depth and a clean burnished edge — you can feel each line with a fingernail. Machine-stamped yantras have uniformly flat, shallow impressions and a glossy printed look; the bindu and triangle vertices will not be crisp. DivineTatva yantras carry a certificate of hand-engraving signed by the master craftsman.
Can I place a Shri Yantra in my bedroom?
A pooja room or living area is preferred, but placement in the bedroom is permitted if you keep it in the north-east corner, above bed-level, and ensure it is not directly facing the foot of the bed. Cover it with a clean cloth when the bedroom is being used for sleep or intimacy.
How often should I worship the yantra?
Daily darshan (a respectful gaze with folded hands) is sufficient for householders. A formal pooja with mantras, lamp, and offerings is ideal on Fridays, Purnima, Navratri, and Diwali. Weekly cleaning with a soft dry cloth is recommended.
Can women worship the yantra during their menstrual cycle?
The Sri Vidya tradition is uniquely feminine-centred — Tripura Sundari is the supreme Shakti. Classical texts allow mental worship (manasa puja) and silent darshan during menses; physical touching of the yantra and offering of flowers is traditionally paused for the first three days and resumed after a bath.
Where do I dispose of an old or damaged yantra?
A consecrated yantra is never thrown away. Immerse it in a flowing river, a clean pond, or the sea. If a water body is not accessible, bury it under a peepal or tulsi plant with the bindu facing the sky. Recite "Om Shreem Hreem Shreem" three times before immersion.
Can I use a printed paper yantra instead?
A printed paper yantra is acceptable as a temporary placeholder for daily darshan, but it cannot be energised in the same way as engraved copper — paper does not hold prana, and the lines are not cut into the substrate. For genuine sadhana, copper, silver, or sphatik is required. ---
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