This copper door is a poetic solidification of oriental philosophy, which melts the cosmology of “heaven is round and earth is square” into the breath of the metal. The craftsmen use millennia-old burin techniques to carve out layers of rippling concentric circles on the copper surface, with each arc echoing the flow of Tai Chi and yin and yang rhythms. Hidden under the oxidized copper's greenish-gray background, the door opens and closes as if opening the cycle of energy in heaven and earth.
Customized products are available upon request.
The spirit of copper awoke in the square. The hand-wrought circular moon-shaped door ring sounds like a chime bell when it rings, and the hidden nine-palace riot structure interprets ancient architectural wisdom with modern mechanics. The copper surface grows a unique coating with time, the patina that rises in the plum rain season is like a mountain of ink in the circular lines, and the Tai Chi totem on the back door of the tenth year may generate new rust lines and become the metal fortune-tellers of the family fortune. This is not a simple portal, but a container for cultural genes. You can customize your own cultural code - turn the window mullion pattern of the family ancestral hall into a carved door frame, or turn the bronze lock into a miniature star map of the Big Dipper. The intelligent light and shadow system activates the corresponding scenes during traditional festivals: the Mid-Autumn Festival projects the cycle of the moon phase, the Spring Festival blossoms the peony shadow, making every moment of returning home become a cultural ceremony through ancient and modern times. When children chase the light spots flowing on the door knocker with their fingertips, when the patina quietly climbs the knot under the newlywed moment, this door becomes a three-dimensional family history book. It uses the eternal texture of metal to wrap the flowing warmth, so that "reunion" is no longer an abstract concept, but the body temperature of copper at your fingertips. In the era of mechanical reproduction, craftsmen use hammer chisel as a pen to write the narrative of time under the Chinese roof on every inch of copper surface.





