Archives for posts with tag: thai

L150xW70xH70mm, Thailand

This bamboo weaved box is a rice serving basket for Thai sticky rice.  So finely made, it is perhaps too precious to be used for a daily task.  Here is the recipe for Thai sticky rice for 2 persons.

INGREDIENTS

  • 1.5 cup glutenous rice (sweet rice)
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • water
  1. wash the rice thoroughly
  2. soak the sweet rice in water with the salt  for 1-2 hours (this will shorten the cooking time)
  3. pour the sweet rice through a sieve
  4. put the sieve with a lid over a saucepan and steam 
  5. after 10 mins, flip the rice over and steam for another 5 mins
  6. put into contain and serve

DIA180mm, Thailand

This is a buffalo bone necklace from Thailand, the beads are not finely polished giving a more natural wooden look.  The hook and closure are made with buffalo horn.  Buffalo has been a part of the traditional Thai agricultural for a long time, they helped to do the laboriousness task of ploughing the paddy field, a treasure livestock for the farmers.  The horns, bones and hide are used for many traditional crafts.

W150xH150mm, Thailand

This is a gold hairpin to be worn by the bride in a Thai wedding.  During Thong Mun, the engagement ceremony (which sometimes is on the same day as the wedding), the groom will present gold sindod (dowry) to the bride.  The ceremony will be attended also by friends and relatives.

DIA70xL280mm, Thailand

This is a powder horn, a container for carrying gunpowder.  It is made with a a buffalo horn with a nonferrous metal for the base and the spout.  Powder horns were very common at a time when muzzle loading guns are used, people would store their black powder for ammunition reloads.  As the gun making technology advanced with the same ignition process, the need for carrying the powder horn diminished.

L40xW20xH50mm (L), Thailand

I used to play with these when I was a child, a flock of these metal birds.  I am certainly surprised to find out they are weights for measuring opium when i am older.  On further research, I am please again to know that because of the small weights they are used to measure anything light and precious (metal, spices etc).  The bird figure is of the Hamsa which represent a perfect balance, union and life.  As the Hamsa can walk, fly and swim; it is believed they have the power to transcend the limitation of the creation around it.

These brass weights are made with the method lost wax casting; a clay core model of the weight is made, a lay of molten wax is poured over the model.  The wax is refined and covered again covered by layers of clay which takes the negative form.  Drain duct as placed for the wax and gas to escape, the clay core secured, then molten metal is then pour in through an opening at the base, as this is going to be a precise weight the amount of metal used is carefully measured.  The wax is melted and replaced by the metal which takes the detail and shape of the wax, the outer layer is removed and the weight is casted.

The large hamsa weights 10 tical (164g), medium 3 tical (49g), small 1 tical (16g)

W60xD60xH130mm, Thailand

These are a couple of Sawankhalok figurines of men with their fighting cocks, these are ceramic figures with a celadon glaze.  Sawankhalok and Suhokthai are best known for their traditional ceramics.  The are believed to be votive offerings to be placed inside shines for guarding natural spirits (hill, river, tree etc.)

W150xH150xL250mm, Thailand

A Korean legend about the tiger lily; once upon a time … there was a hermit who save a tiger by removing a arrow from his wound.  The tiger requested the hermit to use his magic to extend their friendship after his death.  After the death of the tiger, where his body lay sprouted a tiger lily.  The hermit got drown by the river and his body was washed away, tiger lily spreaded along the river bank as though the tiger was looking for his missing friend.

These are the first fake flower that I can appreciate, each petal are carved out from wood.

H250xW100xD150mm, Thailand

Please pray for those who are suffering by the flood in Thailand, the worst in 50 years, and that serenity will return soon.

Praying monk figurine; they are usually found in a pair at either side of the Buddha statue, both kneeling, one praying and the other one has his hands resting on the thighs.