SEVEN MATERIALS
The bead is the practice.
Drag the bead to rotate. Scroll to move between materials. Each is rendered with a custom shader — the surface, the rim, the way the light catches the grain. Real beads vary far more than this. These are the seven that japo currently supports.
01 / 07 · SEED OF SHIVA
Rudraksha
Carved from the seed of Elaeocarpus ganitrus, the rudraksha bead is the traditional choice of the Shaiva practitioner. Each seed bears between three and twenty-one natural faces — mukhi — and the count is read with reverence. A five-mukhi bead is the householder's bead.
Real rudraksha is dense enough to sink in water and bears asymmetric ridges that no two seeds share. The bead darkens with use; an old practitioner's mala carries the patina of a thousand mornings.
02 / 07 · LEAF OF VISHNU
Tulsi
Ocimum sanctum, the holy basil. The bead is turned from a tulsi branch that has lived and been pruned in a temple courtyard. For Vaishnav practitioners, tulsi is not merely a plant but a manifestation of Lakshmi.
Light, warm to the touch, with a faint herbal scent that lingers in the wood for years. Tulsi mala turn the deepest brown over time.
03 / 07 · CLARITY MADE SOLID
Crystal
Quartz, cut into spheres. The crystal mala is associated with the worship of Saraswati and with the cultivation of mental clarity. Light passes through the bead and refracts, scattering rainbow points across the practitioner's hand.
Heavier than wood, cool in the hand. The count feels deliberate.
04 / 07 · STILLNESS IN THE DEEP
Onyx
Black onyx, polished. A bead for protection and for grounding. The dark stone does not catch light easily; it accepts it, then returns it as a narrow specular line.
Common in Saiva and Shakta practice, and in some Buddhist traditions where the bead's weight serves the count.
05 / 07 · SCENT OF THE PRACTICE
Sandalwood
Carved from the heartwood of Santalum album, sandalwood mala beads carry the scent of the practice itself. A bead held in the hand for a year will, on warm days, still release the faint resin of the tree it came from.
Sandalwood is the bead of Vaishnav and Buddhist householders. Light enough to wear, warm enough to soothe, dense enough that the count feels deliberate.
06 / 07 · THE MOON'S OWN BEAD
Pearl
Sea pearl, drilled and strung. Worn in some Vaishnav traditions and in Sufi practice. The pearl's iridescence is an accident of layered nacre — light bouncing between thin films — yet the eye reads it as a presence.
The most fragile of the materials. A pearl mala is a slower mala.
07 / 07 · BORN OF MUD
Lotus
Lotus seed (Nelumbo nucifera) beads are pale, translucent, almost cream. The seed sprouts in dark water and rises clean — the most concise metaphor in Indian thought.
Lotus mala are used across Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain traditions. The bead is light, and the count is patient.
From the library