Phra Phutta Nur Meghasiddhi • Nur Meghasiddhi
BE2519 • Luang Phor Wan • Wat Phutthaisawan • Verified with Thaprachan Certificate
Collector Lens — Why This Piece Matters
“Phra Phutta” pieces are often collected for a very specific reason: they carry a calm, non-theatrical Buddhist presence. When the material is identified as Nur Meghasiddhi (เนื้อเมฆสิทธิ์), collectors typically place extra emphasis on two things — correct form (silhouette, facial planes, and the base geometry) and credible provenance. This example is presented with a Thaprachan certificate, which is meaningful because it shifts the conversation from “nice story” to “documented reference.”
Amulet Information
Amulet Name (EN): Phra Phutta
Type / Pim / Variant: Phra Phutta (Buddha image)
Material: Nur Meghasiddhi (เนื้อเมฆสิทธิ์)
Year (BE): 2519
Monk: Luang Phor Wan (หลวงพ่อวรรณ)
Temple: Wat Phutthaisawan (วัดพุทไธศวรรย์)
Certification: Thaprachan Certificate (ภาพประกอบในชุดภาพ)
Condition Note: Please assess via the full photo reference set below (front/back/side/comparison/certificate).
Price:
SGD 338
History & Lineage Context
This piece is presented as BE2519 and attributed to Luang Phor Wan of Wat Phutthaisawan. The listing does not include an official release objective (e.g., building fund, commemoration, committee documentation), so the safest collector approach is to frame chronology and attribution strictly by what is shown: the form, the material presentation, and the supporting certificate.
In the Thai collecting world, Wat Phutthaisawan carries historical gravity as an Ayutthaya-linked temple site, but each amulet’s “issue story” still requires its own documentation. Where the listing does not provide temple-issued book references, the Thaprachan certification becomes the primary trust anchor for the individual piece.
Material Study — Nur Meghasiddhi (เนื้อเมฆสิทธิ์)
“Meghasiddhi” is often described by collectors as a distinctive sacred alloy category with its own visual language. Because the term is used in multiple contexts across the market, the most responsible way to write about it is evidence-first: how the material appears across front/back/edge, whether the surface reads naturally aged, and whether the piece aligns with certified exemplars.
- Surface character: look for consistent “skin” across recessed and raised areas (not just polished highlights).
- Edge reading: the side profile can reveal casting/press consistency and natural wear patterns.
- Consistency with certification: treat the certificate as a reference point for what the market recognises as correct for this piece.
Iconography & Pim Notes
Buddha-image amulets are often evaluated by quiet proportions rather than dramatic features: the harmony between the head, torso, and base; the clarity of the seated posture; and the symmetry of the surrounding frame. If a piece is genuine and well-preserved, the “calm geometry” remains readable even when the surface shows honest age.
Traditional Spiritual Attributes (Respectful Framing)
In Thai Buddhist practice, Buddha-image amulets are typically approached as reminders of refuge and conduct — not superstition. Collectors may describe common traditional associations, but these are best understood as practice intentions, not guaranteed outcomes.
- พุทธคุณ (Phuttha-khun): steadiness of mind, clarity, and restraint.
- คุ้มครอง (Protection): cultural framing of safety through mindfulness and careful choices.
- เมตตา (Metta): calmer presence, softer interactions, and reduced friction.
Full Photo Reference Set
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Disclaimer: This post is written for education and collector documentation. Historical and lineage statements are based on the listing-provided details and the attached certificate image(s). Traditional spiritual attributes are described respectfully as cultural practice framing and do not guarantee outcomes. Independent verification is encouraged when required.