A rich calligraphy work.

The writing method is as shown in the following figure, based on the traditional Chinese characters of "Lucky for Money and Treasure", taking the radicals of "Zou Jin" as a whole, and combining other characters. The word "Zhao" is cleverly used to replace the "Cai" part of the word "Cai", and the word "Zi" is used as the bottom next to the word "Cai", which is very clever in design.

Extended data:

The combination of "lucky money and treasure" means lucky money, which comes from the second fold of "Falling Mulberry" in Tang Qing, Liu Yuan: "Lucky money and treasure make the whole family safe." This is a symbol of good luck.

The charm is a kind of strange writing that is considered to summon ghosts and gods and hate town curses. Its characters are difficult to distinguish, like books and paintings, and are widely used in Taoism.

Fu Shu originated from the ancient people's worship of words. In civilized times, official documents, especially orders and decrees, have mandatory authority, which strengthens the worship of words in the minds of ordinary people. According to the existing literature, Taoist symbols were formed in the Eastern Han Dynasty, which was the result of moving the symbol of secular rights to the world of ghosts and gods. The cover of Taoist symbols imitates the biography of symbols in Qin and Han dynasties, and is mainly transformed from characters in the Central Plains.