Office & Commercial
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Signage Direction and Color

Shop signage follows two Vastu principles: direction (N/E for visibility and ill

Fire N/E
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: साइनेज — उत्तर/पूर्व (Signage — Uttar/Pūrva)

Modern Vastu consultants recommend N/E signage with directional color matching. LED-lit signs maintain visibility after sunset. Modern practice also considers the sign's reflection in neighboring glass buildings — a N/E-facing sign reflected in a SW building creates secondary visibility.

Source: Contemporary Vastu Shastra compilations

Unique: Modern practice adds digital signage to the Vastu framework: LED screens and scrolling displays should follow the same N/E facade rule. The color-direction rule extends to digital displays — warm palettes for E-facing screens, cool palettes for N-facing screens.

OF-032

Signage Direction and Color

Architectural diagram for Signage Direction and Color

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The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

N, E

Main signage on North or East facade. Colors matching directional elements. LED illumination for night visibility.

Acceptable

NE, NW

NE for premium brands. NW for promotional banners.

Prohibited

S, SW

S/SW signage — washed out, energetically absorbed. Red signage on North facade (water-fire conflict).

Sub-Rules

  • Main signage on North or East facade Moderate
  • Sign color follows directional rules (green/blue for North, warm for East, red for SE) Moderate
  • Main signage on South facade (washed out, harsh glare) Moderate
  • Sign color clashes with directional element (red on North, blue on SE) Moderate

Principle & Context

Shop signage follows two Vastu principles: direction (N/E for visibility and illumination) and color harmony (colors matching the directional element). North (water element) flourishes with green, blue, and white. East (fire via Surya) thrives with warm gold and saffron. SE (Agni) suits red. The combination of correct direction and harmonious color creates maximum brand visibility, recall, and energetic attractiveness.

Common Violations

Main signage on South facade with no alternative

Traditional consequence: The sign is washed out by harsh midday sun, creating glare that makes it unreadable. Yama's energy causes passersby to unconsciously avoid looking at the sign — reduced brand visibility and recall.

Red or fiery-colored signage on North facade (water-fire conflict)

Traditional consequence: The fire-element color clashes with Kubera's water-element North — the sign creates energetic dissonance that subconsciously disturbs passersby. Brand recall drops despite the sign being physically visible.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition provides the most detailed color-direction mapping: N=green/blue, NE=white/light blue, E=gold/saffron, SE=red/orange, S=coral/pink, SW=brown/terracotta, W=white/silver, NW=grey/light colors.

Hemadpanthi

Maharashtrian tradition adds that the signage should be illuminated in the evening — Kubera's North is a 24-hour visibility zone, not limited to daylight hours.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil tradition draws color associations from temple Gopuram painting: East-facing signage should echo Gopuram palette (saffron, gold, warm crimson). North-facing should use Kubera-palette (green, blue, white).

Kakatiya

Telugu tradition adds that the signage lettering should be in gold or yellow on dark backgrounds — this color combination provides maximum contrast and aligns with all directional elements.

Hoysala-Jain

Jain tradition specifies that signage should be elegant and truthful — no exaggerated claims or flashy designs. The sign reflects the business's character, and N/E placement ensures this honest representation reaches the customer.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala tradition adds that wooden signs (teak, rosewood) are energetically superior to metal or plastic — natural materials on the N/E facade harmonize with the directional elements better than synthetic materials.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarati tradition adds that the first letter of the shop name on the signage should be larger and gilt — the 'Akshara Pratishtha' (letter consecration) channels Kubera's blessing through the primary letter.

Vishwakarma

Bengali tradition adds that the sign background should be dark (navy, black, deep green) with light lettering — this creates both maximum contrast and a dignified appearance appropriate for Kubera's North.

Kalinga

Kalinga tradition adds that the sign should be at a height proportional to the shop's width — the classical ratio is 1:8 (sign height = 1/8 of facade width). This proportion derives from Shilpa Shastra's architectural ratios.

Sikh-Vedic

Sikh-Vedic tradition adds that the sign should include the founding year if the business is established — longevity displayed on the North facade channels Kubera's accumulated-wealth energy.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: साइनेज — उत्तर/पूर्व (Signage — Uttar/Pūrva)
Deity: Kubera
Element: Water (Jala)
Source: Contemporary Vastu Shastra compilations

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Directional energy audit and correction using modern Vastu instruments — contemporary standard

Modern Vastu

Elemental balance through material selection and colour therapy — modern Vastu practice

Modern Vastu

Place the main signage on the North or East facade of the shop

structural5,000–₹50,000high

Choose sign colors that harmonize with the facade direction: green/blue for North, gold/warm tones for East, white for West, red for SE only

symbolic0–₹10,000medium

If sign must be on S/W facade, add a secondary illuminated sign on a N/E-facing perpendicular panel or blade sign

structural10,000–₹40,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Vastu Yantra installation at the Uttara zone — North Indian Sthapati tradition

Vedic Vastu

Vastu Shanti Homa to pacify directional imbalance — Vedic ritual standard

Tulsi Vrindavan placement near the Uttarekadil zone for elemental balance — Maharashtrian Wada tradition

Hemadpanthi

Ganesh Sthapana at the commercial entrance — Pune Wada builder custom

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 62-68

The emblem and name-mark of the merchant shall be displayed on the Uttara or Purva wall, where Kubera's gaze ensures it is remembered and Surya's light makes it clearly visible to all who pass.

ArthashastraII.IV · 40-44

The sign of the shop shall bear colors that honor the direction it faces. Green and blue for the Northern facade, warm gold for the Eastern, red for the Southeastern. These colors are drawn from the directional elements and ensure harmony.

ManasaraXI · 60-66

The Naamapatta (nameplate) of a commercial house shall be placed where it receives the most auspicious light. The Purva and Uttara facades ensure visibility and attract the favorable attention of passersby.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraXXV · 30-36

Colors of signage must resonate with the element of the facade direction. Water-element blues and greens grace the North; fire-element reds the Southeast; earth-element browns the Southwest. Discordant colors repel fortune.

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