Description
At the crown of this navy-ground go-chor, the Namchu Wangden — the Ten Powerful Letters of the Kalachakra tantra — sits within a gold-framed arch. Below it, a line of Uchen Tibetan script in orange-red carries an auspicious textual invocation. This combination of tantric seed syllable and mantra text at a home or monastery threshold is a deliberate act within Tibetan Buddhist domestic practice: to mark the entrance as a site of Dharma protection and to affirm the spiritual orientation of the household.
The central field carries a full rendering of the Eight Auspicious Symbols — treasure vase (Kalasha), endless knot (Dpal be’u), parasol (Chhatra), dharma wheel (Vkhor Lo), lotus (Pad Ma), conch shell (Shankha), and victory banner (Dhvaja) — rendered in teal, gold, orange-red, and pink against the deep navy ground. At the lower edge, a pair of golden fish (Ashtamangala Matsya) swim in a teal water panel flanking a lotus — a motif symbolising freedom and abundance in Tibetan Buddhist iconography. The side borders carry the five-colour pangden stripe pattern, with the standard auspicious symbol header and prayer-flag colour bands at the top.
The navy-indigo ground creates the most dramatic visual contrast of the five designs in this range, with the gold and teal Ashtamangala symbols reading with particular intensity. At 172 × 102 cm, it fits a standard door frame and hangs from three sewn loops. Each piece is sourced directly from artisan workshops in the Eastern Himalayan hills and dispatched from Kalimpong, West Bengal.




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