Necklace , from Natural White and Black Pearls. Wisdom and Harmony. Sterling Silver 925.
Material: Black and White Pearls.
White Pearls:
Natural, white, super gloss.
Size: 8 – 10 x 7 – 8 mm
Black Pearls:
Black, blue-green color, super gloss.
Size: 8 – 10 x 7 – 8 mm
Necklace length: 60 cm
With SterlingSilver 925 claps
Weight: 198 g
2) Bracelet, from Black and White Pearls with the strongest Buddhist symbol “Yin Yang” and claps Sterling Silver 925.
Material: Black and White Pearls.
White Pearls, super gloss.
Size: 7 – 8 x 7 – 8 mm
Black Pearls:
Black, blue-green color, super gloss.
Size: 8 – 9 x 7 – 8 mm
Strongest Buddhist symbol “Yin Yang” : 13 x 3 mm
Length: 20 cm
With Sterling Silver 925 claps
Weight: 17 g
Total weight: 215 g
Buddhism gave the world wisdom and the art of harmony, Chinese philosophy developed the concept of Yin-Yang – harmony and balance of different elements and opposites. Feng Shui showed the way to achieve a harmonious life.
Yin and Yang – one of the most recognizable symbols – a circle divided into two halves. One of them is black and the other is white. they are two opposites. This symbol of light and darkness, good and evil has existed in Buddhism and Chinese philosophy since ancient times. Like winter and summer, day and night, heat and cold. The truth encoded in the Yin-Yang sign is that one does not exist without the other, and together they are united into something harmonious.
There is a little controversy regarding pronunciation, some write and pronounce Yin-Yang, others insist that it is more correct to pronounce and write Yin-Yang. But, in fact, the translation from Chinese is correct in both the first and second cases, so these disputes are simply meaningless.
The Yin-Yang symbol reminds us that light exists only where there is darkness. If we expand this thought and plunge into Chinese or Buddhist philosophy, then in this symbol we will see the cosmogonic principle – both forces are present in all creation: the manifestation of the Yin principle, as passivity, and the manifestation of the Yang principle, as activity. It would seem that everything is obvious here: activity is good, and passivity is bad. But this is only our purely worldly understanding or perception of the world around us.