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Ser Tud Kring Nur Thong Phanom Luang Phor Chuen Wat Tham Ser, Tha Muang, Kanchanaburi

$48.00

Ser Tud Kring • Nur Thong Phanom

Year (BE): Not specified in the listing • Wat Tham Ser, Tha Muang, Kanchanaburi • Luang Phor Chuen • A compact Tud Kring-style piece commonly kept for everyday carry

SKU: TAC-174

Description

Ser Tud Kring • Nur Thong Phanom

Year (BE): Not specified in the listing • Wat Tham Ser, Tha Muang, Kanchanaburi • Luang Phor Chuen • A compact Tud Kring-style piece commonly kept for everyday carry

Overview — “Ser Tud Kring” in Nur Thong Phanom (ทองผนม), attributed to Luang Phor Chuen of Wat Tham Ser. Collectors often group Tud Kring items as practical daily-carry pieces

What This Piece Represents (Collector Lens)

Tud Kring pieces are loved for one simple reason: they’re compact, durable, and easy to keep close—on a keychain, in a pouch, or in a small personal shrine corner. This listing highlights Nur Thong Phanom and a Wat Tham Ser connection, with Luang Phor Chuen named as the monk associated with the piece. For collectors, that “temple + monk + material” trio is the starting point for appreciation—and for deeper verification if one wants to go further.

Amulet Information
Name: Ser Tud Kring 
Material: Nur Thong Phanom (ทองผนม) — Not specified in the listing beyond the material name
Year (BE): Est. 10-15 Years
Temple: Wat Tham Ser, Tha Muang District, Kanchanaburi
Monk: Luang Phor Chuen
SKU: TAC-LPC-SER-001

Price:

SGD 48

History & Lineage Context

The listing identifies the piece as connected to Luang Phor Chuen of Wat Tham Ser in Tha Muang, Kanchanaburi. Beyond that, the listing does not specify a release year (BE), batch name (รุ่น), or event purpose for issuance. In collector practice, these missing fields are normal for smaller carry items—many were made for temple fundraising, merit activities, or local devotee distribution, but documentation can vary widely.

One practical detail included in the photos is the presence of an original temple box. While packaging alone is never “proof,” collectors often treat it as a helpful supporting cue when matched with consistent workmanship, material appearance, and known temple distribution patterns.

Temple and monk biographies are not provided in the listing, so this article keeps the context strictly to what is shown and stated in the images and caption notes.

About the Material

“Nur Thong Phanom (ทองผนม)” is presented in the listing as the material identity of this Tud Kring piece. In amulet culture, named “nur” materials are often used to describe a recognizable metal mix or finish associated with a temple or maker tradition. The listing does not provide the exact composition, so collectors typically rely on visual cues and known references for comparison.

  • Nur naming (คำว่า “นวล/เนื้อ”) usually signals a recognized metal look or mix used in that temple’s production.
  • Collectors check tone, surface texture, and oxidation behavior rather than assuming composition.
  • For compact carry pieces, condition is often evaluated around edges, base, and hanging points (if present).

Design / Pim / Variant Notes

The listing labels this as “Ser Tud Kring” and shows multiple angles (both sides and the base). The exact pim/variant system is not specified, so the safest collector approach is visual comparison: match the form, proportions, and base finishing against other Wat Tham Ser references tied to Luang Phor Chuen.

Traditional Spiritual Attributes & Metaphysical Properties

In Thai amulet culture, Tud Kring-style pieces are commonly carried with simple, everyday intentions—steady protection, calm confidence, and a “safe journey” mindset. Devotees often frame these benefits through merit (บุญ), mindfulness, and respectful conduct, rather than treating the object as a guarantee.

  • คุ้มครอง (Protection): A common carry intention for compact amulets used daily.
  • แคล้วคลาด (Avoidance of harm): Often worn for travel and routine risk moments.
  • เมตตา (Metta): Some devotees associate small carry pieces with smoother interactions and goodwill.

Rarity Assessment & Collector Significance

The listing does not specify production quantity, batch, or year, so rarity cannot be stated as a fact. Collector significance here comes from: (1) a clearly stated temple and monk association in the listing, (2) multiple angle photos showing form and finish, and (3) the included original temple box, which can be a useful supporting element when consistent with known Wat Tham Ser packaging.

Conclusion

This Ser Tud Kring in Nur Thong Phanom is best appreciated as a practical daily-carry piece tied (by listing note and presentation) to Luang Phor Chuen and Wat Tham Ser, Kanchanaburi. For collectors, it’s a straightforward entry: keep it close, document it well, and verify against known references when building a tighter temple-based collection.

Angle 1 — listing photo reference (side view).

Angle 2 — listing photo reference (opposite side view).

Base view — useful for checking finishing and wear patterns.

Original temple box — supportive cue (not a standalone proof).

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