Chinese New Year Is About What You Carry With You

Why People Choose Aporro’s Wong and Horseshoe Motion

Chinese New Year isn’t just about celebration.
It’s a moment to pause, look forward, and decide what you’re stepping into next.

Some people chase luck.

Others choose something they can carry — something intentional, symbolic, and aligned with the direction they’re moving.

That’s where Aporro’s Wong and Horseshoe Motion collections belong. Not as decorations for a holiday, but as pieces people choose when they want the year to feel different.

Wong: Power, Bound Wong

Aporro Wong’s collection is built around presence. At the center of the design, two dragon heads meet and bite onto a circular ring. In Chinese symbolism, this isn’t aggression — it’s restraint. Two forces holding the same seal in place. Power controlled, not released. The ring represents continuity and completion; the dragons act as guardians, not threats.

The chain extends that language through Cuban links carved with dragon-scale texture. Scales in Chinese culture symbolize protection and accumulated strength — layered, overlapping, earned. Each scale is set deliberately, catching light in a way that feels alive rather than decorative. Even the clasp is part of the ritual. A pavé box is finished with the raised character 「龍」 (dragon), stamped like a seal of authority rather than a logo.

Wong 2: What Power Protects

Wong 2 shifts colder and sharper in silver, and the meaning deepens. Here, the dragon wraps around green jade — a stone that represents balance, clarity, and moral strength in Chinese culture. Jade has never been about showing off wealth. Historically, it was worn to signal character. 

In Wong 2, the dragon biting onto a flat jade coin symbolizes power guarding value, not consuming it. The matching bracelet echoes this idea through scale-inspired links and jade-green accents that soften the aggression, adding calm to the strength.

Wong isn’t something you wear for one day.
It’s something people choose when they want a piece that carries meaning year-round.

It’s been worn by global names including GloRilla, Lil Nas X, and Lil Tay — not as costume, but as identity.

Horseshoe Motion: Direction Over Luck

If Wong is about strength, Horseshoe Motion is about direction. Across cultures, the horse has always meant the same thing: movement. Not luck. Not waiting.
Momentum that creates outcome.

The horseshoe was never made to decorate. It was made to protect movement. In the West, it allowed horses to endure distance and pressure. In the East, the horse has long symbolized fortune in motion — success earned through action.

Horseshoe Motion is built around that belief. Its flowing, horseshoe-inspired links feel kinetic even when still. The curved hardware and pavé-set details read like joints and rhythm — forward, continuous, unstoppable.

It’s not something you wear to hope for change.


It’s something you wear when you’re already moving. Together, Wong and Horseshoe Motion form two sides of the same intention: one guards strength, the other sustains momentum.

Chinese New Year becomes less about wishing — and more about choosing.

Website: https://www.aporro.com


Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aporrobrand/

Wong 1 & 2 Collection : 

Wong 2 IG post: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C6bGS6PNkbE

HorseShoe