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Our most sought-after pieces — each verified authentic before leaving the monastery.
Pieces our community returns to — worn through grief, ceremony, and quiet everyday devotion.
Verified authentic. Rare value — same blessing, exceptional price.
Our community's most trusted pieces — worn through ceremony and quiet devotion.
Fresh from Lhasa. Each piece blessed before it boards the plane.
37 Years in Lhasa
Single custodian since 1987. Not a brand — a lineage. Every object passes through one set of hands before reaching yours.
Blessed Before Departure
Each piece receives a consecration ceremony at the source monastery. The blessing travels with the object, not the packaging.
100% Monastery Origin
No factory intermediaries. We source directly from Tibetan artisans and monastery workshops — material, craft, and intention intact.
47 Countries, One Standard
Objects reaching collectors in 47 countries — yet every piece meets the same authenticity criteria we've upheld since 1987.
Lhasa, Tibet · Since 1987
Each mala, thangka, or pendant is a vessel of spiritual energy — crafted with devotion, blessed by high lamas, and meant to accompany your path toward peace and mindfulness.
We work hand in hand with Tibetan artisans and monasteries, sourcing over 90% of our materials directly from Tibet to preserve authenticity and living heritage.
For each mala, thangka, or pendant you purchase, we donate $1 to support children’s education in remote Tibetan villages. Your choice brings blessings, learning, and hope — weaving compassion into every act.
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I found the bracelet after my mother’s passing. I wasn’t looking for anything Buddhist — I was just looking for something to hold onto. It’s been on my wrist for eight months now. I haven’t taken it off once.
My grandfather always said real sacred objects have weight — not just physical weight, but presence. When the mala arrived I understood what he meant. This is not a piece of jewelry. It is a conversation with something older.
I bought the Thangka for my father’s memorial altar. He would have approved — he spent two years in Dharamsala in the 70s studying with monks. I think he would have said: this one knows its origin.
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