A small object of protection
Lucky charms, often seen in temples and festivals across Taiwan, are traditionally worn or carried as a form of protection.
Filled with incense ash, herbs, or blessed materials, they are believed to ward off negative energy and bring safety to the person who carries them.
They are often given to children, travelers, or loved ones — not as decoration, but as something to keep close.
Something you carry, without thinking
Unlike objects that stay in one place, lucky charms move with you.
They are tied to bags, worn on the body, or kept in pockets — quietly present in everyday life.
Over time, they become familiar objects, often forgotten until they are needed.
This closeness gives them a different kind of meaning: not something you look at, but something that stays with you.
From ritual to personal object
At Good Luck Club, we see lucky charms as more than traditional artifacts.
They represent a way of carrying intention — turning protection into something physical, personal, and portable.
Rather than something distant or symbolic, they become part of daily movement, quietly accompanying the body.
If the lucky cat invites and the Tiger God protects, the incense pouch is what you carry — a small object that holds both.