Story of product:
8 precious items that people offer to Buddha are called Eight Symbols of Good omens. Each item is relevant to a part in the body of Buddha. The Eight Symbols of Good omens can be worn to replace the status of Budha.
Early Buddhist aniconic representations of Buddha’s footprints invariably depicted auspicious symbols as divine marks on the soles of his feet. These included the lion throne, victory banner, Vajra, water flask, elephant goad, hair-curl, eternal knot, swastika and conch shell; but the most common of these marks were the lotus and wheel.
In early India Vajrayana Buddhism the eight symbols were deified into eight goddesses, known as the Ashtamangala Devi, who each carry one of the auspicious symbols as their attribute.
Tibetan tradition identifies the eight symbols as forming the body of the Buddha, with the parasol representing his head, the golden fishes his eyes, the lotus his tongue, the treasure vase his neck, the wheel his feet, the victory banner his body, the conch his speck, and the endless knot his mind.