AMULETS OF POWER
Not ornaments. Not decoration.
Each amulet is a vessel — a fragment of force waiting for the belief you place within it.
Forged through ritual, blessed by lineage, carried through fire, these objects are not bound to one tradition. They move across time, across faith, into the present moment — to be worn, displayed, or held as reminders of your own alignment.
Some speak of protection. Others of clarity, abundance, or release. All hold the same invitation: to become the anchor for whatever power you choose to awaken.
An amulet is not complete on its own. It becomes whole in your hands — when you breathe into it, when you let it carry the memory, the prayer, the promise.
Objects that protect.
Objects that carry.
Objects that remember.
LUANG PHOR KOON AMULETS
A monk of the people. A figure of fearlessness.
Luang Phor Koon (1923–2015) embodied humility, compassion, and unshakable spirit. Orphaned young, ordained at 21, he walked the jungles in solitude, trained by masters, facing storms and spirits alike. Always simple, always human — yet revered as untouchable.
His amulets are more than objects. They are echoes of his presence: carriers of luck, protection, prosperity, and courage. In Thailand, his talismans are kept close — worn against the chest, tucked into cars for safe passage, held as anchors of strength and remembrance.
Each amulet channels the legacy of a monk who gave everything to the poor, built schools and hospitals, and transformed lives without ever taking for himself. His body was donated to science, his spirit entrusted to the people — and his amulets remain as vessels of that same devotion.
LUANG PHOR PERN AMULETS
The Monk of Tigers.
Luang Phor Pern (1923–2002) was no ordinary monk — he was a guardian, healer, and living embodiment of the tiger’s fearless spirit. Trained in sacred magic, he wandered jungles, faced spirits and storms, and returned carrying a power that became legend.
In Thai lore, the tiger symbolizes survival, protection, and strength. Pern bound this spirit into his blessings, his Sak Yant tattoos, and his amulets. Soldiers, wanderers, and seekers carried them as shields against bullets, blades, and unseen forces.
His amulets are vessels of that unbroken lineage — carrying the tiger’s aura in metal and clay. Protection. Power. Fearlessness. Even after his passing, the Tiger Monk’s spirit endures in every etched form, every blessed piece, every oath spoken under his name.
To wear his amulet is to carry the tiger:
Fearless. Protected. Untouchable.
AMULET DISPLAY CASE
A frame for presence.
Handcrafted from a gallery-grade shadow box, adapted to hold your amulet or necklace as both artifact and art.
The magnetic door allows effortless access while protecting the piece within. A neutral linen backdrop honors the talisman without distraction, letting its form and story speak.
Whether mounted on a wall or displayed on a shelf, it transforms sacred objects into focal points — keeping their presence alive in your space.