Phra Somdej Thawada Khatoh • Pim Yai
BE2495-2500 • Wat Rakang Kositaram • Listing notes attribution to Luang Pu Nak (LP Nak)
Phra Somdej Thawada Khatoh (พระสมเด็จเทวดาขัดโต๊ะ) • Pim Yai (พิมพ์ใหญ่) • BE2495-2500 — Wat Rakang Kositaram • listing-attributed to Luang Pu Nak.
What This Piece Represents (Collector Lens)
Among Wat Rakang circles, “Somdej” is never just a Buddha image — it is a language of proportions, surface, and lineage. The Thawada Khatoh theme (เทวดาขัดโต๊ะ) is especially collector-facing: it signals a named variant that serious collectors compare by silhouette and block identity, not by storytelling. “Pim Yai” (พิมพ์ใหญ่) further tightens the lens — bigger imprint geometry, more obvious line relationships, and clearer evidence cues when you evaluate authenticity and age.
Amulet Information
Name: Phra Somdej Thawada Khatoh • Pim Yai (พระสมเด็จเทวดาขัดโต๊ะ • พิมพ์ใหญ่)
Material: Nur Phong sacred powder (เนื้อผง)
Year (BE): 2495-2500
Temple: Wat Rakang Kositaram (วัดระฆังโฆสิตาราม)
Monk: Luang Pu Nak (LP Nak) — listing attribution
Price:
SGD 128
History & Lineage Context
The listing frames this as a Wat Rakang Somdej “Thawada Khatoh” Pim Yai within a BE2495-2500 range. It does not specify a single issue event (งานสร้าง / commemorative purpose) or an official committee note. In collector documentation, that means we state the range as given, then rely on visible evidence: block style, imprint harmony, edge/side reading, and the way age presents consistently across the set.
Luang Pu Nak is named as the associated monk in the listing. If you want a biography anchor for deeper context, you can reference your own biography page here (opens in new tab): View Biography.
Wat Rakang Kositaram is one of the central “Somdej” gravitational points in Thai amulet culture. That reputation is precisely why discipline matters: when the listing does not provide batch documents, the correct approach is to describe what is known, clearly mark what is not specified, and let the photographs carry the evidence.
About the Material — Evidence-First Reading (เนื้อพระ)
Because the listing does not state a confirmed material, we read the piece “from the outside in.” With Somdej families, collectors commonly examine three layers of evidence: (1) the surface grain and pores, (2) how the imprint sits into the body, and (3) whether ageing looks coherent across front/back/side rather than selectively “new.”
- Surface: consistent natural texture (not uniformly polished or artificially “melted”).
- Imprint behavior: edges and recesses should look like a true mould/press outcome, not re-carving.
- Age coherence: tone and handling marks should agree across all views (front/back/side).
Design Notes — Thawada Khatoh & Pim Yai (พิมพ์ใหญ่)
“Thawada Khatoh” is a named Somdej variant that collectors usually compare by outline rhythm and signature details. Pim Yai enlarges that conversation: line spacing becomes more readable, and any mismatch in proportions is easier to spot. When documenting, it helps to focus on stable markers: the central Buddha silhouette, the platform tiers, and the frame balance — then compare like-for-like against trusted references from the same variant family.
Traditional Spiritual Attributes & Metaphysical Properties
In Thai amulet culture, Somdej amulets are often worn with a calm, practice-oriented intention rather than dramatic claims. Devotees typically describe the “Somdej field” using Thai terms that point to inner steadiness and social harmony. These are respectful cultural framings — not guarantees.
- เมตตา (Metta): a gentler presence and smoother interactions; often linked to the Somdej tradition.
- คุ้มครอง (Protection): framed as support through mindfulness, restraint, and “safer choices.”
- แคล้วคลาด (Klaew Klaad): a traditional way of expressing “avoiding harm,” often tied to alertness and discipline.
Rarity Assessment & Collector Significance
The listing does not state production quantity, block count, or an official publication reference for BE2495-2500. So “rarity” should be described as collector evidence cues rather than a claim. Practical indicators include: consistency of Pim Yai geometry across multiple examples, natural ageing that matches the stated era range, and stable signature details in the Thawada Khatoh variant when compared against recognised reference sets. Where documentation is absent, strong photo documentation (as provided here) becomes part of responsible collector practice.
Conclusion
This Phra Somdej Thawada Khatoh Pim Yai is presented as a Wat Rakang piece associated (by listing attribution) with Luang Pu Nak and dated to a BE2495-2500 range. The correct collector approach is disciplined: record what the listing states, mark what is not specified, and let the form, surface coherence, and cross-reference comparison do the heavy lifting.
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Disclaimer: This article is for education and collector documentation. Lineage and dating statements are written as “listing notes / attributed” unless supported by official documents. Traditional spiritual attributes are described respectfully as cultural framing and do not guarantee outcomes. Independent verification is encouraged.