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The Sacred Art of Kansa Rituals
Rooted in classical Ayurveda, these bronze massage tools stimulate marma points, support energetic balance, and bring radiance through the traditional art of touch.
Seven smooth Kansa nodes. A carved wooden handle. Pressure precisely where you need it.
This tool is made for two practices: Śiro Abhyanga, the classical Ayurvedic scalp massage, and marma point work on the body. The rounded nodes are shaped to sit accurately on a marma point and sustain contact there your shoulders, the base of your skull, your upper back, the soles of your feet. Used slowly, with oil, the Kansa draws excess heat from your tissue. You feel the release immediately.
On the scalp the nodes cover a broad area with each movement. On the body a single node locates the precise marma point. One tool, two practices, one material that Ayurvedic tradition has relied upon for this quality specifically: solid bronze cools. It calms your Pitta, settles your Vata.
The Kansa Comb is a scalp tool cast from Kansa metal, the copper-tin bronze used in Ayurvedic ritual practice for centuries. The teeth of the comb are pointed and designed to reach the scalp through the hair, making contact with the marma points of the head as the comb moves slowly across the scalp. This is not a massage tool used with pressure. The correct technique is slow, deliberate, and gentle, the pointed teeth do the work; you simply guide the comb.
Kansa has a naturally cooling quality. In Ayurveda, this is associated with calming Pitta in the head, the accumulated heat that shows as scalp sensitivity, irritation, and a restless, overheated mind. The comb draws that heat gently outward as it moves across the scalp.
This is a tool for daily use. Two to three minutes in the evening, used dry or with a light hair oil, is sufficient. Used consistently, it becomes one of the quieter and more grounding habits in a daily Dinacharya practice of Śīrṣa Abhyanga.
Two domes, each shaped for a different part of the face. The larger dome glides across cheeks, forehead and jawline, covering the broad, open areas in slow circular movements. The smaller dome turns for the precise work: temples, brow, under-eye, the edges of the nose.
The metal has a naturally cooling quality. In Ayurveda, this is traditionally associated with Pitta balance — a calming of warmth and reactivity in the skin. The faint grey-green tint you may notice during use is a natural reaction between the metal, the oil, and your skin's pH. It washes off easily and is not harmful.
Apply 3 to 4 drops of face oil before you begin. Work across both sides of the face, starting from the centre and moving outward. Gentle pressure is enough — the tool does the work. Five to ten minutes daily is ideal.
For external use only. Clean and dry thoroughly after each use. Store away from moisture.
An Ayurvedic foot-massage wand with a kansa (copper–tin bronze) dome and ergonomic hardwood handle. Used in Kansa Vatki/Padabhyanga to stimulate plantar marma points, support lymphatic flow, cool excess pitta, and relax the nervous system.
An Ayurvedic body-massage wand with a large kansa (copper–tin bronze) dome and ergonomic hardwood handle. Ideal for Abhyanga and targeted marma work on shoulders, back, arms and legs. The naturally cooling metal helps pacify pitta, ground vata, and supports micro-circulation and gentle lymphatic flow for deep relaxation.
Important: Make sure to clean and dry the Kansa Wand after each use to extend its life. Store it in a dry place, away from moisture.
The Mini Kansa Wand is cast from classical Kansa, a copper-tin bronze used in Ayurvedic facial practice for centuries. The dome is intentionally small sized to follow the orbital bone, reach the brow ridge, settle into the temple, and work the four marma points around the eye that a larger tool cannot address with precision.
Kansa has a naturally cooling quality. In Ayurveda, this is associated with calming Pitta, the accumulated heat that shows around the eyes as puffiness, sensitivity, and a dull, uneven complexion. Used with a face oil in slow, deliberate circles, the dome draws that heat outward and helps the oil absorb more completely than applying by hand.
This is the tool used in Netra Abhyanga, the traditional Ayurvedic eye-area ritual. At home, practiced for five minutes each morning or evening, it is one of the more quietly effective habits you can build into a daily routine.
A hand cast Kansa (copper–tin bronze) bowl used in Padabhyanga and Kansa Vatki therapy. The natural cooling quality of kansa helps pacify pitta, soothe tired feet, and calm the nervous system while stimulating plantar marma points.
The Kansa Gua Sha is a facial massage tool hand-cast in Kansa metal, the traditional copper-tin bronze used in Ayurvedic practice. The form follows the gua sha technique: broad, deliberate strokes across the jaw, neck, cheeks, and forehead. The material is what sets it apart from stone tools.
Kansa has a naturally cooling quality. In Ayurveda, this is associated with calming Pitta, the heat and reactivity in the skin that shows as redness, puffiness, and an uneven complexion. Stone tools carry no such property. The Kansa draws warmth gently from the skin's surface as the tool moves across it, which is why the experience of working with it feels different in the hand.
Used with a face oil and slow, upward strokes, the Gua Sha helps the oil absorb evenly and leaves the skin looking calm and settled. It is a practice that takes five minutes and requires nothing more than a few drops of oil and a consistent routine.
Kansa, The Healing Metal of Ayurveda
Mentioned in classical Ayurvedic texts as "Samvahaka Loham" (the metal that supports wellness through touch), Kansa is a traditional alloy of copper and tin. It is valued in Ayurveda for its smooth quality against the skin and its traditional association with balancing the doshas and supporting pranic flow. When used in massage, Kansa tools stimulate marma points, calm the nervous system, and promote a sense of energetic alignment, bringing harmony to both body and mind.
Getting Started with Kansa Wand — Your Questions Answered
The Kansa Ritual is a traditional Ayurvedic self-care practice using tools made from Kansa bronze (an alloy of copper and tin). It includes facial massage (Mukha Abhyanga), body massage, scalp massage (Shiro Abhyanga), and foot massage (Pada Abhyanga). Each uses a different Kansa tool designed for that specific body area.
Kansa has been valued in Indian culture for over 5,000 years. Ayurvedic texts refer to it as a sattvic (pure) metal. Traditionally, food was served on Kansa plates and water stored in Kansa vessels. In bodywork, the smooth surface of Kansa bronze glides well over oiled skin, and the metal is believed in Ayurveda to have a balancing quality when in contact with the body.
If you are new to Kansa rituals, the Kansa Face Wand is the best starting point. Facial massage is the most accessible practice — it takes only 5–10 minutes, can be done at your vanity or desk, and the results are immediately noticeable in how your skin looks and feels. From there, many people add the Kansa Vatki for foot massage and the Body Wand for full Abhyanga.
A complete daily Kansa ritual follows this sequence: morning — Kansa Face Wand with facial oil (5–10 min), Kansa Scalp Massager with hair oil if washing that day (3–5 min). Evening — Kansa Body Wand with massage oil during Abhyanga (10–15 min), Kansa Vatki on the soles of the feet with warm oil before bed (5 min). Start with one tool and add others as the ritual becomes part of your routine.
Yes. Each Art of Vedas Kansa tool is hand-cast and finished by skilled artisans in India using traditional metalworking methods. The Kansa alloy is prepared in specific copper-to-tin ratios, poured into moulds, and then hand-polished to achieve the smooth dome surface needed for massage. No two pieces are exactly identical.
With proper care, Kansa tools last a lifetime. The metal does not degrade, chip, or break under normal use. Kansa develops a natural patina over time which can be polished away with lemon and salt. Store tools in a dry place and clean after each use. Many Indian families pass Kansa items down through generations.

