🧘 Antique Thai monk's bag decorated with handwritten yant , from Wat Kositaram in Chai Nat province, temple of the most venerable Luang Phor Kuay Chutinathō . This worn and weathered bag appears to have been worn for many years by a monk of the forest tradition, and is now a precious relic for practitioners and collectors of the master's lineage.
On the front side, there is an embroidery of the Dharmachakra (wheel of Dharma) , a classic Buddhist emblem, surrounded by partially erased inscriptions clearly mentioning Wat Kositaram (วัดโฆสิตาราม).
The fabric is decorated with handwritten yant made in black ink , among which we recognize several times the personal yant of Luang Phor Kuay , as well as a central pentacle (elaborate yantra of the Paed Tidt type) on the back. The style is faithful to the esoteric tradition of the monks of the forest, it is in all likelihood an object having belonged to a disciple of the very venerable luang phor kuay, and it is very possible that the decoration is by the hand of the Venerable.
This bag is in a worn condition: the fabric is stained, and the inks are partially erased. It has not been cleaned to preserve the integrity of the yant. Its natural place today would be in a frame or on an altar dedicated to meditation or the veneration of Luang Phor Kuay.
🔍 Details:
- Origin: Wat Kositaram (วัดโฆสิตาราม), Chai Nat province
- Associate Master: Luang Phor Kuay Chutinathō (1905–1979)
- Estimated age: around 50 years old
- Dimensions: approximately 65 x 40 cm
- Condition: worn, visible stains, inks partially erased
A rare object intended for veneration or collection, for followers of the Thai tradition of wandering monks.
🌿 This ancient monk's bag is said to have belonged to an anonymous monk of the Thudong tradition, traveling from forest to forest, reciting khata at the foot of a tree or in the flickering light of an oil lamp. The blackened fabric bears the traces of time, but above all those of practice: each yant is a door, each symbol an offering engraved on the material itself.