Painted Tsa Tsa Display Stand
Painted Tsa Tsa Display Stand - Yamantaka is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Care information
Care information
Display general product information or specific product information using metafields.
Delivery and Shipping
Delivery and Shipping
Add some general information about your delivery and shipping policies.
Highlight title
Text to highlight a key feature of your product
Specs
Size: Height 18cm,Width 18cm, Thickness 4.5cm,Inner diameter 14cm
Weight: 570.3g
Origin: Tibet
Product Details
This display features the image of Yamantaka, featuring a complex yet imposing appearance.Yamantaka stands as the “annihilator of extreme obstacles,”existing to shatter stubborn karmic barriers that ordinary dharma protectors struggle to breach. Targeting hopeless predicaments— such as business collapse, ancestral karmic entanglements, severe illnesses, and deep-seated obsessions—he crushes the roots of karmic hindrances with thunderous might, guiding practitioners to accumulate merits and wisdom, and fulfill their spiritual and worldly aspirations.
This display features the image of Black Jambhala. With three round eyes wide open and flaming red hair bristling, he symbolizes overcoming obstacles and warding off evil on the path to wealth through sheer power. In his right hand, he holds a kapala bowl, which represents wealth and wisdom. Known as the "King of Wealth Gods," Black Jambhala symbolizes attracting wealth, ushering in blessings, removing financial obstacles, and protecting diligent people. He harnesses wealth with wisdom, capable of warding off financial hindrances in life. Worshipping him can bring blessings of smooth careers, accumulated prosperity, and breakthroughs from difficult predicaments.
This display features the image of Vaishravana . He rides a snow lion and holds a treasure - spitting rat in his left hand, symbolizing the continuous flow of wealth. In his right hand, he grasps a victory banner, signifying the vanquishing of obstacles to wealth and the safeguarding of financial fortune. Vaishravana, the chief guardian of wealth in Buddhism, exists to address all facets of wealth - related challenges. He empowers people to unearth profit - generating opportunities in their professional lives, seize lucrative prospects, break through bottlenecks, and ultimately attain the dual fulfillment of financial freedom and spiritual awakening.
This display features the image of Ganesha. It has an elephant head, with a solemn yet serene facial expression. Adorned with exquisite golden ornaments, it fully embodies holiness and magnificence. In Hinduism and other cultures, Lord Ganesha is the god of removing obstacles, wealth, and wisdom. His multiple arms symbolize the ability to provide protection and assistance to believers in various aspects. The various ritual implements he holds also have their own meanings, which can bring good luck, dispel bad luck, and help people overcome difficulties and obstacles in life. At the same time, it also symbolizes that it can bring wealth, wisdom, and prosperity to people, and is a symbol of auspiciousness and good fortune.

At the top is the image of Four-Armed Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva.The Four-Armed Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva is the patron Buddha of those born in the Year of the Rat. It blesses the wearer to "turn perils away with compassion, break through predicaments with wisdom, and accumulate merits of blessings and wisdom," protecting people through all kinds of hardships and dispelling various disasters.
At the lower left is the image of Manjushri Bodhisattva, who holds a sword of wisdom and sits on a lotus throne, symbolizing cutting through career obstacles and embodying purity free from defilement.Manjushri Bodhisattva is the patron Buddha of those born in the Year of the Rabbit, symbolizing great wisdom. He helps enhance wisdom and sharpen insight, guiding actions with wisdom and verifying wisdom through actions. He aids people in fulfilling their wishes, leading a happy and fulfilling life, and supports students in achieving academic success.
At the lower right is the image of Vajrapani Bodhisattva. He derives his name from holding a vajra in hand, and as the wrathful manifestation of Mahasthamaprapta Bodhisattva, he is also known as "Great Power Vajrapani". Vajrapani Bodhisattva has a dark blue-black complexion, one head and two arms, and wears a five-skull crown—symbolizing the Five Buddhas and their corresponding Five Wisdoms. His three round eyes are wide open, representing his ability to perceive the past, present, and future, while his golden hair and beard stand upright. Clad in heavenly robes and a tiger-skin skirt, he holds a vajra in his right hand and a vajra rope in his left. These attributes embody the fierce, powerful energy of the Dharma, enabling him to subdue all evil, break through obstacles, and protect spiritual practitioners.
Payment & Security
Payment methods
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
Product comparison grid
View moreAdd content here to explain a bit about the range of products on offer and which ones may be most suitable for your customers.





