How to weave mandalas from threads. What a mandala can do during weaving. What you need to weave a mandala

Buddhists and Hindus have come up with many ways to depict a mandala for everyday life, but one of the most common is considered to be a mandala woven from threads. If at first it will be quite difficult to figure out what goes where, then after several unsuccessful attempts an insight comes to you and weaving a mandala becomes a fairly simple and entertaining activity.

Such accessories are often used as amulets by teenagers from 10 to 17 years old, but among adults there are also many lovers of this kind of handicraft. You can simply put a homemade mandala in your pocket or bag and carry it with you. They are very light, but at the same time durable, of course, if you use good threads and warp.

Advice: first, decide exactly how you want your amulet to look. For example, you can draw a sketch on paper.

But not everyone knows how to weave such a talisman correctly. A master class on weaving a mandala from threads with your own hands will help us with this.

Mandala made of threads: step-by-step MK with photographs

First stage

First, let's figure out what materials we need.

1) Wool or cotton threads. Choose the color of the thread yourself, but choose wisely.

2) 2 sticks. You can use toothpicks if the size of the product is not important to you.

3) Scissors.

Second phase

Now that all the necessary items have been collected, you can begin to weave the mandala.

First we need to secure the sticks together. To do this, we tie them with a knot in the middle and begin to wrap them several times. Rewind as tightly as possible.

Spread the sticks apart to form a cross.

Then, we rewind several times along one diagonal around the middle of the cross.

After several times in the other direction.

P.S. Make sure that the sticks do not lose their position! They should form a cross (one stick is perpendicular to the other).

We wrap each stick in turn with the same thread. Using the method, going in with the thread from the top, then wrapping the stick, and again through the top, moving on to the next one.

Tie a knot on the wrong side and cut off the excess thread.

We take a new one and again tie a knot on the wrong side, continue to weave as if nothing had happened.

It is encouraged to use different colors. We continue this way until we run out of sticks.

As soon as the sticks run out, tie a strong double knot at the very edge of one of them (on the inside) and cut off the thread.

Your first simple thread mandala is ready!

We also offer you a master class on weaving a mandala with beads:

And the technique of a quick four-pointed mandala without full braiding:

Here's the simplest diagram:

Indian mandala

This type of weaving will be more complicated, but if you are not afraid of difficulties in achieving your cherished goal, then this mandala is for you.

We will need:

1) 4 sticks. Preferably not as small as toothpicks.

2) Threads. Several colors.

3) Scissors.

So, the Indian mandala is eight-rayed, which means we need to weave two completely identical squares (each from two sticks) and connect them together.

We make a strong cross, as in the previous instructions, which you can find above.

Don't forget to wind along a different diagonal.

We wrap each stick of the cross in turn, first bringing the thread up, and then returning it to ourselves and moving on to the next stick.

When you decide that your square is ready, cut the thread with a small margin and tie a knot on any stick.

We take the next thread and tie it to any stick, then we wrap it as if nothing had happened, holding the knots at the same time. Wrap the previous knot with a new thread.

P.S. Pull the threads tightly, otherwise the mandala will end up saggy.

You can add another colored border to the square, but don’t overdo it.

Now the first square is ready, which means you can start making the second. The second part of the mandala will be for the reverse side, which means you shouldn’t be too zealous with its color scheme. But make the same diamond in the center as in the first part.

Now, using the ray pattern, we connect two mandalas together. To do this, tie a new thread to a double knot on any stick of the upper (first) square.

We place one square on top of the other so that the rays of the second are between the rays of the first.

The most interesting! We take the tied thread and lower it onto the third nearest adjacent ray, wrapping it around it.

Now our task is to tie each subsequent stick in two! That is, now we are on the bottom stick, the next top (1), the next bottom (2) and the next top again! That's what we need. Hold the mandala firmly so that it does not turn out crooked.

Braid the mandala in this way with two or three more flowers.

Now take another thread and tie a knot on any stick, start wrapping all the sticks in sequence. This is called a belt.

Weave the belt with several threads.

Take a new thread and tie a knot on the stick of the upper square. Now we braid each stick through one, passing under the bottom one, that is, the next one will be the adjacent top one.

We weave the same symmetrical square on the lower sticks.

Weave several layers with one type of weaving.

Finally, weave a belt in several colors to give the design a complete look.

Indian mandala is ready!

There is also a video:

How to make a clock based on an Indian mandala:

Quick Indian mandala:

Conclusion

Many needlewomen, with the help of such magical accessories, try to get to know themselves and their inner world, or simply to please their family and close friends. What to do now with the resulting structure is up to you. It will look great anywhere and is not very noticeable, but at the same time it performs its main function - attracting energy. What kind of energy is up to you to decide: if you think only about bad things, then only bad energy will be attracted, and there will only be more problems.

The first of the master classes on mandala weaving, provided by Olga Valova. So, let's begin...

Let’s imagine a quiet surface of water, a white water lily on its surface. A light breeze runs through, and barely noticeable ripples run across the water, the reflections of white petals are crushed... If you have recordings of nature music, rain, waterfalls, they will help you create the right mood.

To make a mandala we will need:

  • threads (iris, narcissus)
  • 6 slats, 50 cm long, 6-8 mm in diameter with notches in the center and 5 cm marks from the center to the ends of the slats
  • scissors
  • PVA glue and second glue
  • large bead

Tie the two slats in the middle and rotate them at 90 degrees to each other. Wind the yellow thread diagonally along the diagonals of the center of the connection of the slats, so that the slats are secured into a strong cross. Continue weaving with the same thread, throwing it on top of the rail, making a full turn around the rail and moving on to the next rail in the circle, also throwing it on top. So make 8-10 turns, making sure the thread is evenly tensioned. Cut about 50 cm of yellow thread and thread it through the hole in the bead.

In the middle of the weaving, place a bead on instant glue and braid it with the remaining thread, as shown in the figure. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 5-7 rows of squares with white thread. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 5-7 rows of squares with peach-colored thread. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 15-20 rows of squares with white thread. Make sure that the weaving is uniform according to the marks on the slats. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail. The center of the lily is ready.

On the 4 remaining free slats, braid two squares with white thread so that they are the same in size as the first square (they should have the same total number of rows). Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Place squares 2 and 3 relative to each other at an angle of 30 degrees and connect in the center, applying a little second glue to facilitate further weaving. The square that is at the top is cross-connected to the bottom square with a white thread. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

View from the inside at this stage.

Place the square with the bead on the second glue above the two squares you just glued together. Now there will be an angle of 30 degrees between each pair of slats. Weave the rays, to do this, connect all three squares together like this: braid a white thread once around the strip, draw it down the wrong side under all the squares and braid the same strip, but on the opposite side from the center. So braid all the slats. Lily petals are ready.

Braid the petals with a white thread, wrapping each slatt 10-15 times on each side of the center. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Weave a green thread through one strip. Since the mandala has 12 points, the square in this case turns into a hexagon. To do this, tie a knot on one strip, pass it under the second, wrap it over the third, pass it under the fourth one, wrap it over the fifth one, and so on, twisting each odd stripe and passing it underneath each even one, until you reach the stripe with the knot. Repeat this for 8-10 rows. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Repeat the same with a thread of the same color, twisting each even strip and passing from below under each odd one. Do not cut the thread.

Using the same green thread, weave a circle, twisting each strip from above and moving on to the next. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

The same:

  • braiding, twisting each odd strip and passing from below under each even
  • braiding, twisting each even strip and passing from below under each odd
  • braiding each strip in a circle

Run sequentially with threads of light green color, again green color and marsh color. Now after the petals you have 4 rows of lily leaves.

Twist a white thread through two onto the third rail. To do this, tie a thread on the rail, pass along the bottom under the wrong side under two slats and twist the third one once on top, continue until you come to the rail with which you started. So repeat 5-7 rows. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Repeat the previous technique 2 more times so that the remaining 8 slats are also braided with white thread. After this, weave a white thread through one slate, braiding one and passing all the slats at the bottom from the inside under the second, one row at a time. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 7-8 rows of turquoise thread through one rail. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 15-20 rows of blue thread through one strip (above the blue rows). Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Weave 15-20 rows of blue thread through one strip (above the turquoise rows). Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Braid 7-8 rows of turquoise thread through one strip (above the blue rows). Braid 7-8 rows of blue thread through one strip (above the blue rows). Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Weave a white thread through two onto the third rail. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Repeat the previous technique 2 more times so that the remaining 8 slats are also braided with white thread. Do not cut the thread.

Perform the “knot” element. To do this, use a white thread to make a loop, bring this loop under the crosshairs of the white threads and thread the cup into this loop, carefully tighten the knot. Then wrap it once around the next rail in the circle. Do this element throughout the entire circle. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail. The “reflections in the water” of lily petals are ready.

Close-up of the knot element.

Repeat the same with marsh and light green thread. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

The same close-up.

Using a green thread, braid each 7-8 rows in a circle. Then 1 row with a thread of the same color through two slats to the third. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

Using a white thread, weave the entire circle through one rail onto the second, 8-10 rows at a time. Using a thread of the same color, braid 2-3 rows through one slate to the second, passing the thread not UNDER the slats on the wrong side, but ABOVE the slats on the front side. Cut the thread and tie it around the rail.

The same close-up.

Sequentially, with threads of blue, cyan and turquoise colors, braid each rail in a circle for 7-8 rows and 1-2 rows with white thread. Do not cut the white thread.

The same close-up.

Use a white thread to close the work and process the ends of the slats. To do this, wrap the thread tightly around the rail until the end, then go back and transfer the thread without cutting it to the next rail in a circle. Apply a little PVA glue to the very ends to prevent the thread from rolling. Cut the thread and carefully tie a knot on the wrong side; you can apply a drop of PVA glue to the knot.

How to make a mandala with your own hands? In this article, the author will share his experience of weaving the very first mandala.

By the way, a little information about what “mandala” means.

Mandala is a symbol in a complex geometric image. A mandala can be made from sand, wood or metal, it can be painted or embroidered, made of stone or woven from multi-colored threads. They depict it on the floor, walls, painted mandalas, just like paintings are framed, and in temples they decorate vaults with them.

The mandala (emphasis on the first syllable) includes the following shapes: a large circle is the Universe, a square is the cardinal directions, a small circle is the dimensions of the Divine, triangles symbolize lotus petals.

What is Mandala for?

1. Firstly, it can become your amulet, a “calming”, magical and inspiring remedy.

2. The mandala serves as a symbol for meditation.

Mandala is revered not only in the East, but throughout the world. This sacred attribute for worship in Hindu and Buddhist religious practice is done under a special ritual.

3. It is often used as a psychotherapeutic tool for realizing one's own purpose and understanding oneself.

This is a very brief and generalized description of the meaning of the mandala.

Find “coloring pages” on the Internet, print them out and create! Or come up with something of your own.

Let's get to work.

What do you need to weave a mandala?

1. Good mood, positive thoughts.

2. Four sticks. It can be anything: pencils, sushi sticks, even toothpicks for the smallest mandala, used pen refills (if the refill is very flexible, you can put toothpicks or matches inside it). Or go and cut off a few branches. So it was decided to ask for a good cause. The branches turned out to be different in thickness, and not very straight. All this can be easily corrected with a knife. To make the sticks more even, they were tied along their entire length with a rigid rope and left overnight. By morning they straightened up.

3. Multi-colored threads.

One nuance needs to be taken into account here. It is best to take natural threads for mandala.

  1. Natural wool is durable, slightly scratchy. Looks very good.
  2. Cotton and linen are a tough thread and very durable. It will look beautiful on a small mandala.
  3. Cotton + viscose. Very strong and shiny thread. As a rule, the thread is thin.
  4. Acrylic can come in different thicknesses and textures. Mostly fleecy. Not a very strong thread. It's better not to use it. But learning to make the first mandala is quite good.
  5. Do not use synthetic threads like nylon. Such threads stretch well, and then they can sag, but this should not be allowed.

From the experience of weaving the first mandala, the following conclusions were drawn:

1. You need to choose the right thread in accordance with the thickness of the sticks.
2. Watch the video on mandala weaving several times!
3. Watch how the thread lies on the reverse side.
4. Measure the tension of the thread. Otherwise, you can tear it or break the ray.

In general, with a good mood and the thought that the mandala will be woven in at least an hour, the author of the article gets to work.
The dream of quickly accomplishing a miracle was shattered by the clumsiness of his hands.

** The first action was done deftly and quickly: connect two sticks, wrap them around the middle and make a cross, weave a square in the center of the cross. And so - twice, i.e. we get two crosses. You will see more detailed and visual information about the technique of weaving a mandala in the video at the bottom of the article.

** The next stage is the “socket”: you need to connect these two crosses.

This is where the fight against their “disobedience” began. 🙂 Ten fingers were not enough to hold exactly two crosses and braid the rays with the “Star” pattern - this is when you braid through two sticks - every third. The mandala walked in all directions, not wanting to gain a foothold, and the craftsman puffed and worried about how clumsy he was.

Having somehow overcome this stage of weaving, it was decided to dissolve it, since everything turned out to be not very even. And the reverse side was completely forgotten - there the threads clung to each other and lay very ugly, but should have looked like a star.

Since the mandala was spinning in all directions, it could still be rotated, but then the threads on one side would become more tense, and on the other, they would sag.

The master exceeded all his expectations when adjusting the distance between the beams and broke one of the sticks. 🙂 Since the rays turned out to be quite long, this situation turned out to be not critical.

** The third stage is braiding with squares. This is already much easier. Here we braid every second ray with a thread. You can use 2-3 different colors. It turns out very beautiful

** The fourth stage is the belt. The easiest thing to weave.

The threads for weaving a mandala, their combination, the creator can convey his state of mind at the time of this action. In essence, a mandala is an encrypted schematic pattern through which all wisdom, knowledge, and customs could be passed on to future generations. Creating a mandala is characteristic of meditation. With each turn of the thread, the master approaches mental balance. In some mysterious way that defies logic, anxiety goes away, mood improves, and solutions to important problems are found.

When creating the first mandala, there was no talk of “weaving” affirmations. But a vital task at that time was solved - to hone his skills.

When the first mandala was woven, the overall picture of the pattern was not yet clear. The main thing was to learn.

It was decided to make the second mandala using toothpicks. Thin cotton threads were used for this. This little mandala was woven much easier.

This is how they turned out, the first and most memorable.

When they were introduced to the household, everyone was surprised and later admitted that contemplation on the mandala can be endless. It seems to hypnotize and distract you from negative thoughts.

Perhaps the first mandalas will not be perfectly straight. The wrong colors will be selected. But nothing is perfect in the world. Therefore, feel free to grab the sticks and threads (whatever you have) and get to work!

If you like to draw, draw a mandala. Here the flight of imagination is not limited at all.

What else is useful for weaving a mandala?

Mandala weaving could be included in the curriculum of lessons on creativity and labor

  • This is a very useful activity for developing hand motor skills.
  • Fidgets will become more diligent.
  • Children will develop an aesthetic perception of color combinations.
  • This activity is very good for training concentration and memory.
  • Weaving a mandala will help children with an unstable, aggressive psyche to calm down.

And now, for all those who are interested in how to create such beauty, a video about weaving a mandala. This is a very good guide for beginners. Watch, learn.

You might be interested

MANDALA IN ART THERAPY

Mandala (Sanskrit: मण्डल, "circle", "disk") is a geometric symbol that is interpreted as a model of the universe, a "map of the cosmos". The typical form is an outer circle with an inscribed square within it, within which is inscribed an inner circle, which is often segmented or lotus-shaped. The outer circle is the Universe, the inner circle is the dimension of deities, bodhisattvas, buddhas. The square between them is oriented to the cardinal points.

Circular images similar to mandalas existed among all peoples.

The very shape of the circle is the main feature of many sacred centers and prehistoric places of worship and cult of the gods. Ancient peoples perceived the world as a sphere, believed in the cyclical nature of what happened, therefore, in the image of a circle (mandala), the past, present and future were reunited for them. The circle has no beginning, no end, no direction - like the firmament. But if you put spokes on a circle, it will become a symbol of a wheel, which will immediately demonstrate a new quality - dynamics - the movement of the world, the course of history. Not only “mythical”, but also very real structures have the shape of a circle. From ancient Greek myths we know that the temple of Apollo in the country of the Hyperboreans was round; Plato’s “royal city” on Atlantis consisted of a system of concentric circles of land and water. The cult building Stonehenge, built in the 8th–5th centuries. BC. consists of several ring structures, the sacred temple of Arkaim, shamans’ drums, Chinese bronze mirrors, on the back of which was a diagram of the Universe... I could go on for a long time. Many temples in various religious traditions are built according to the mandala design.

Creating a mandala, according to psychotherapists, puts us in a meditative state, making us especially receptive to the messages of our inner world.

Psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung considered the mandala an excellent tool for internal transformation on the path of self-realization. He studied mandalas with keen interest and drew them himself. By the way, Jung drew attention to the fact that during difficult periods of life, our unconscious often prompts us to draw something like a mandala or see such figures in our dreams.

The numerous geometric shapes that are contained in the mandala represent aspects of the personality, structured more or less symmetrically. Once you find the resonance between them, reconcile them with each other, you will see the path to the center of your own personality.

Mandalas are unique pictures of the world that express the inner world of a person, as well as objects of Power that protect the home and owner.

Before coloring or drawing your own mandala, if you have a problem, you can voice it and ask the future mandala to be the solution. The colors and shapes of the mandala will “come” according to your mood.

A mandala, as a crystallization of an emotional-personal state, can symbolize various experiences, for example, “Concentric circles in a mandala or various variations thereof are associated ... with the womb, the navel, the orifice, birth ...” (Roheim, 1973). Also, such a structure of the emerging mandala can symbolize a “target”, pressure, threat, and protective rituals.

Drawing a mandala, an analytical conversation on a mandala helps to understand the feelings that have arisen and the situations that caused these feelings. Accordingly, it becomes possible to change your attitude towards the situation or change the situation itself.

MANDALA WEAVING

A mandala is an object that projects the internal state of a person, his unconscious, “the reality of the inner world.” Weaving Mandalas come from Central and South America - they were woven by the Huichol Indians. They called their creation “Ojo de Dio” - “Eyes of God”, in the language of the tribe they used the word “Sikuli”, which translates as “the ability to see the invisible”.

The Indians wove mandalas, most often, to protect their home and family and always hung them in an open and most visible place in the house, and also used them for ritual and decorative purposes.

With proper work with the Mandala, a person is able to understand the deep dark corners of his soul, understand the true causes of his problems and the “keys” to solving them, understand what he really wants and expects from life.

Let’s take a closer look at each weaving method so that you can understand what you need.

Intuitive (meditative) way of weaving

Intuitive weaving: first a short meditation, after which a person, without hesitation, begins to choose the initial colors for his work. At this moment, the Heart is responsible for choosing the color; the main thing is not to overthink it, but to plunge into this process with Love.

Each time, unique creations are born, filled with the Love of the person who created the Mandala. Completed Mandalas fascinate with their marvelous patterns, geometry, color combinations, and play of shades!


For children
Weaving Mandalas is a great activity: concentration, development of motor skills, color therapy, development of creative abilities - and just a good mood!

For adults the process of weaving has a deeper meaning: immersion occurs in oneself, where the train of thoughts stops and all attention is directed to creating the Mandala. It is precisely at such moments that amazing processes occur: insight, understanding and a solution to the problem can come. The finished Mandala is often a reflection of the inner “I”. This way a person gets a chance to learn something new about himself. This happens precisely with intuitive weaving, when colors are chosen without thinking about where the hand will fall.

There is another rather interesting type of intuitive weaving, when colors are selected with your eyes closed. First, there is a dive “into the depths” of a tormenting question or problem, and after immersion in meditation, a person, without opening his eyes, begins to choose colors, and then, opening his eyes, begins weaving. During such intuitive weaving, the solution to the problem can come by itself, or with further work with your Mandala (here the chosen colors and geometric shapes will play a major role).

Weaving Mandalas “At will”

When creating a Mandala, you weave your Desire, Intention and Thoughts into it thread by thread, without letting go of this image. When you complete the Mandala, you need to hang it in the most visible place and let go of the desire, forget about it for a while. You won’t even notice how the intention itself will come true in Life!

Weaving Healing Mandalas and Chakra Mandalas

The process is aimed at activating and harmonizing energy centers, “self-healing”. Helps open a blocked chakra or strengthen it.

Weaving Mandala Amulets

With your own hands you can create a talisman for yourself, your home, or for your family and friends.


The main levels that exist in the Mandala are:

The first level is the mandala of our body. If we look at our structure of centers from above, the contours of the chakras will intersect with each other, and we will see a complex mandala pattern.

The second level is when we stand in a circle of women, we form a middle mandala. And if we look from above, we will see her constantly changing pattern through dance.

The third level is the mandala of the universe. We connect with the energy fields of the earth and sky and all cardinal directions. In this process we dissolve as one.

SECRETS OF WORKING WITH THE MAGIC MANDALA

A mandala is not just a beautiful pattern and an interesting amulet that protects your home. With the help of a mandala you can solve many issues in your life.

What’s interesting is that you practically don’t have to do anything! Working with a mandala is like magic: all changes in your life happen as if on their own! Since the mandala is directly connected to your subconscious, it will miraculously adjust your life situation so that it becomes possible to achieve what you want.

You will need:

— Hang the mandala on the wall so that you can see it.

— Decide for yourself what you want in life.

— Every time your thought concerns your desire, turn your gaze to the mandala. Try to smile and charge the mandala with positive energy!


What is it and why are they still woven?

Mandalas are schematic designs often used by Easterners, particularly in Hinduism and Buddhism. With their help, people passed information from generation to generation. Wisdom, knowledge, history, traditions - all this was encrypted with the help of alternating colors and weaving elements. The Indian mandala is a kind of Amulet; it helps not only to understand oneself, but also to find ways to solve important life problems. Weaving a mandala is similar to meditation - this activity calms you, puts your thoughts in order and helps you achieve inner harmony. Decorative mandalas fascinate with the play of color and their uniqueness. They are a reflection of the creator’s inner world at the time of their weaving. And what colors you choose for your mandala will depend on your inner state.

The word “mandala” translated means “circle”, “disk”. In spiritual traditions, a mandala is not just a circle or a pattern. This is a whole model of the universe, which contains harmony and reconciliation with the world.

Carl Gustav Jung was one of the first European scientists to study mandalas very seriously. In his autobiography, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung talks about how in 1916. he drew his first mandala, and two years later he was sketching new mandalas in his notebook every day. He discovered that each drawing reflected his inner life at that moment, and began to use these drawings to record his “psychic transformation.” Ultimately, Jung came to the conclusion that the mandala method is the path to our center, to the discovery of our unique individuality.

Mandalas have become so popular that all over the world mandalas are drawn, woven, built, and so on.

Images of mandalas are found already in the earliest, primitive cultures. The circle symbolizes a sacred territory, a place of power, so the mandala is able to protect from hostile forces. In addition, the mandala personifies the connection with the Absolute, with higher powers. Its center is the image of the Sun, the Heavenly Door. Many Hindu temples are built in the form of mandalas - they are a combination of circles and squares and symbolize different levels of the cosmos. They include mandalas and images of the human personality, which has to go through the PATH FROM HIS EGO TO THE ABSOLUTE, gradually moving from one level of the universe to another. Images of demons are reminiscent of base passions, those parts of the psyche that hinder the path to enlightenment. In esoteric terms, the mandala symbolizes integrity, the unity of spirit and matter, masculine and feminine, etc.

The mandala is also an auxiliary tool in meditation, the purpose of which is to overcome disunity and achieve unity with God, as well as integrity with all conscious aspects of oneself.

Indian MANDALA Ojo de Dios

The Ojo de Dios (read as “Ojo de Dios”), or Eye of God, charm was given to us by the Huichol Indian tribe who lived in the Sierra Madre Mountains in Mexico. The Huichols had a deep respect for nature. Weaving the ojo de dios mandala begins from the center - the square “eye”. The four corners of the amulet symbolize 4 natural elements: earth, fire, air and water.

Ojo de Dios is the most famous of their symbols. Indians believe that the “eye” pattern can heal and protect. Ojo de Dios is hung on the wall and used in rituals and prayer. The colors used when weaving the amulet also have their own meanings.

Weaving any mandala is a mystical process; the weaving itself brings incredible joy and fills the mandala itself and the one who creates it with energy. Often you don’t even know what kind of mandala will turn out at the very end; it seems to weave itself and gradually reveals itself in the process.

In general, Ojo de Dios amulets are destined to bring good luck.

Treat yourself or make a wonderful gift for your loved ones!

If you know that you are more than just a body, if you feel your connection with the Universe and the divine, if you are looking for answers to innermost questions, the mandala will help you reveal a new facet of yourself.

This is a MASTER CLASS for those who want:

Find out what happens in the depths of the subconscious?

What motivates us at every moment of our lives?

What makes us make certain decisions?

And how can you change your life for the better?

Who wants to immerse themselves in the world of creativity and beauty

Get practical confirmation of your talent

Get an effective tool for managing your energy, mood, mind and creative energy.

By creating a mandala in different shapes and colors, you express your inner “I” and achieve harmony. You change with her. At the moment of creating a mandala, time disappears, and you are immersed in an unusually beautiful world of colors and sensations.

To create a mandala, you don’t have to know how to draw or do anything with your hands. The whole secret is to just start doing it. And then everything will work out.

How can a mandala help you?

Creating a personal mandala is a powerful resource tool that you will learn to use in the future for any of your purposes.

You will create a personalized symbol that will reflect who you are at that moment. The circle of the mandala, as it were, invites the conflicting parts of our inner reality to manifest themselves and come into interaction with each other. Therefore, while drawing mandalas, the existing conflict is resolved and tension is relieved.

In the process of creating Mandalas, you achieve

Increased self-esteem;

Harmonization of the work of the left and right hemispheres

Strengthening the nervous system, improving mental health;

Increasing stress resistance and adaptation

Development of creativity and intuition

Disclosure of internal resource

Each lesson follows the following structure:

1. Meditation exercises (10 minutes)

2. Creating (weaving) your own mandala

The combination of deep relaxation and special music will reveal your creative potential and give you the opportunity to rise from the depths of your subconscious to those symbols that correspond to your current mood and the problem you want to solve. By expressing your state when weaving a mandala using materials of different colors, you can not only feel, but also see what bothers you and prevents you from living harmoniously.


Expected effect

Weaving a mandala will help you step into the world of harmony and inspiration, calmness and self-confidence.

The technique of weaving mandalas is simple, even 7-8 year old children can learn it! However, it is worth noting that the weaving process itself is something more than ordinary needlework! This is deep work with your subconscious.

The colors of the threads from which mandalas are created play one of the most important roles in weaving. Each color and its shades have their own specific meanings, and in diagnostic Mandalas their combinations and combinations can tell more deeply about the presence of a problem and ways to solve it. If this is a Mandala of Desire, then the color of the threads and the pattern itself are selected carefully, depending on the color image of the finished form of your goal.

Not everyone knows how to draw their self-portraits in the classical sense. But the Mandala, woven by you personally, is nothing more than your self-portrait! Therefore, a lot can be said about it. After all, if you have already started weaving, it means that you are ready to get answers to the questions that concern you, as well as to experience new, previously unknown states that the Universe has prepared for you!

Sign up for the MASTER CLASS “Mandala is the key to yourself”, or “Magic mandalas made of threads” (here, in a group or by personal message).