Although Chinese people are very particular about Feng Shui, they still don’t pay much attention to the posthumous photos. However, there are still shops that pay attention to it.
The front wall of the main house cannot be blocked by other things, and debris and dirt cannot be placed in front of the portrait. If it is a building, it is best to hang it in the living room, and the location should be a little farther away. On the other hand, when guests come, it will not affect people's emotions.
If conditions permit, you can set up a special place for worship in another room! It does not have to be placed in the living room, because the portraits will have dark emotions on the family's psychology. If friends and guests come to visit, it will have a negative impact on the psychology of others. There will also be an impact. Faced with a deceased person every day, the family is prone to illness! It affects work and study. Like in ancient times, there were dedicated ancestral halls for worship, instead of filling the living room with spiritual tablets.
For example, on old tables, TV sets, and some are even put away.
In fact, these are not inappropriate, because Chinese people are not willing to talk about "death".
In the West, photos of the deceased are usually hung on the wall in an orderly manner.
In the East, Japan and South Korea still retain the nature of "ancestral halls", which use special small shrines to display deceased photos.
In China, shrines usually contain Buddha statues, Guanyin and the like. However, we can choose a non-religious shrine cabinet and place it in the living room to display photos.
In fact, as long as you have the intention, it doesn’t matter where the photo is placed, because it is more than just a photo.
As said in "The Embalmer": Death is a door. It does not mean the end of life, but passes through it to enter another stage. In fact, it is a door.
It also depends on the situation:
Generally, according to customs, within a year, there will be a special table on the home table if possible, but it cannot be at the same table with gods and Buddhas. The level system, festival incense, refers to ghost festivals, or anniversaries. Three years later, some of them are placed in the cabinet, wrapped in red cloth, or still on the altar table, and some of the photos are placed in reverse, except for the filial son! There are also lay Buddhists who study Buddhism at home, reading the Ksitigarbha Sutra and praying for blessings.