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Celestial Evil Eye Wall Hanging

Celestial Evil Eye Wall Hanging
Regular price $7.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $7.95 USD
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Primary Spiritual Use: Protection
Secondary Spiritual Use: Luck
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Spiritualist-Approved Instructions & Product Info ✅

Some protective charms are meant to be lived with, hung where you will see them every day and slowly stop noticing, even as they keep watch. This Celestial Evil Eye Wall Hanging is one of those, a blue nazar eye framed by the sun, the moon, the stars, and a row of elephants, strung to hang about eight and a half inches down a wall. The evil eye is the old Mediterranean guard against an envious glance, and here it comes wrapped in night-sky symbolism and the good fortune long attached to the elephant. Hang it where you want a quiet, watchful presence, by a door, in a hall, or over a working space, and let it guard the room with a little cosmic charm.

Key Features of the Celestial Evil Eye Wall Hanging

A blue evil eye at the center. The classic nazar sits at the heart of the piece, the watchful blue eye that Mediterranean tradition trusts to turn an envious gaze away.

Sun, moon, stars, and elephants. Celestial motifs and a row of elephants frame the eye, pairing night-sky symbolism with the good fortune long associated with the elephant.

Made to hang on a wall. About 8.5 inches long with a loop for hanging, sized for a doorway, hall, or working space where you want a standing guard.

Product Details

  • Length: approximately 8.5 inches
  • Design: blue evil eye (nazar) with sun, moon, stars, and elephants
  • Hanging loop included
  • For a wall, doorway, or hall
  • Each piece may vary slightly

The Spiritual Significance

The evil eye is among the most widespread folk beliefs in the world, the idea that a look given in envy can carry harm. Its counter, the blue glass eye known as the nazar in Turkish and the mati in Greek, is hung across the Mediterranean and Near East to catch that gaze and turn it away. As a wall hanging, the eye does the same old work of guarding a space, watching over the room it hangs in.

The celestial frame adds its own meanings. Sun, moon, and stars carry a long symbolism of guidance and the turning of cycles, while the elephant is honored in several cultures as a sign of good fortune, strength, and protection. Together they make this less a single charm than a small woven scene of warding and luck, a decorative guard you set over a doorway or a room.

How To Use the Celestial Evil Eye Wall Hanging

  1. Cleanse it on arrival with smoke, sound, or a night of moonlight, then hold it and set your intention for guarding the space.
  2. Choose where you want it to watch: a doorway, a hall, an entry wall, or over a working space.
  3. Hang it by the loop where it can be seen, and name what you are guarding the room against.
  4. Let it hang as a standing guard, refreshing it now and then with cleansing smoke after a heavy stretch.
  5. In tradition, if the glass eye ever cracks, it is read as a charm that took a blow meant for you; thank it and replace it.

Pairs Well With

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the evil eye wall hanging for?

It is a decorative protective charm, hung to guard a room against an envious or ill-meaning gaze. The blue nazar at its center carries the Mediterranean evil-eye tradition, while the celestial frame and elephants add symbolism of guidance and good fortune to the watchful eye.

What do the elephants mean?

The elephant is honored in several cultures as a symbol of good fortune, strength, and protection. Framing the evil eye, the row of elephants adds a note of luck and steadiness to the charm's warding, so the piece both turns away ill will and invites good fortune in.

Where should I hang it?

Anywhere you want watched: a doorway, a hall, an entry wall, or over a working space. Folk tradition favors entrances, the thresholds where stray ill will is thought to gather, but anywhere the piece can be seen and can watch the room works well.

What if the glass eye breaks?

In the tradition a cracked nazar is read as a good sign, not a bad one: the charm is thought to have taken a blow meant for you. If the eye breaks, cleanse the piece, thank it, and replace it when you can with another guard.

How do I cleanse it?

Smoke, sound, or a night of moonlight all suit it. Many practitioners cleanse protective pieces regularly, especially after a heavy or crowded stretch, then restate the intention they first set when hanging it.

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