Handcrafted Lotus Blossom Stupa | Himalayan Meditation Shrine Art
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Size: 31cm(Height) x 15.5cm(Length) x 15.5cm(Width)
Weight: 2.8 kg
Materials: Gold Plated, Gemstone: Coral, Turquoise, Oxidized Copper Body
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About Our Product
This Handcrafted Lotus Blossom Stupa is a sacred Himalayan Buddhist art piece made from an oxidized copper body with radiant gold plating and adorned with coral and turquoise gemstone accents. Standing 31cm tall with a richly detailed 15.5cm base, the stupa symbolizes enlightenment, purity, and spiritual awakening, bringing a peaceful and devotional presence to meditation rooms, Buddhist altars, and sacred interior spaces.
The design features beautifully engraved floral patterns, layered symbolic steps, and graceful hanging ornaments inspired by traditional Himalayan craftsmanship. The lotus inspired detailing represents purity emerging from worldly obstacles, while the coral and turquoise gemstones symbolize healing, protection, vitality, and spiritual balance. At the center rests a sacred niche framed with ornate carvings, enhancing the stupa’s ritual and contemplative character.
In Buddhist tradition, stupas are revered as sacred embodiments of the enlightened mind and are believed to radiate blessings of wisdom, compassion, and harmony into the surrounding environment. This lotus blossom stupa serves as a meaningful meditation support object, altar centerpiece, and spiritual decor piece that encourages mindfulness and inner peace. Its combination of oxidized copper, gold plated details, and gemstone inlays makes it a treasured offering for practitioners, collectors, and sacred spaces.
Introduction of Lotus Blossom Stupa
Prior to Buddhism, great teachers were interred in mounds. While some were cremated, others were sometimes buried in a seated, meditative position, with earth mounds covering them. Consequently, the domed shape of the stupa evolved to symbolize a person in meditation, much like the Buddha when he attained Enlightenment and knowledge of the Four Noble Truths. The stupa's base represents his crossed legs in a meditative pose, the middle portion signifies the Buddha's body, and the top of the mound, where a pole rises from the apex surrounded by a small fence, symbolizes his head. Before human images of the Buddha were created, reliefs often depicted practitioners showing devotion to a stupa.