Phra Somdej Kru Nur Tarkut Wat Suwan Est. 2460 Blessed by Luang Phor Niam Wat Noi, Suphanburi
$268.00
Phra Somdej Kru • Nur Takrut
Wat Suwan (Est. BE2460) • Blessed by Luang Phor Niam • Wat Noi, Suphan Buri
Overview • Phra Somdej Kru • Nur Takrut • Wat Suwan (Est. BE2460) • Luang Phor Niam (Wat Noi, Suphan Bu
Description
Phra Somdej Kru • Nur Takrut
Wat Suwan (Est. BE2460) • Blessed by Luang Phor Niam • Wat Noi, Suphan Buri
Amulet Information
Name: Phra Somdej Kru (พระสมเด็จกรุ)
Material: Nur Takrut (ตะกรุด) • takrut-embedded / takrut-associated presentation
Temple / Source: Wat Suwan (Est. BE2460 as per listing)
Blessing: Luang Phor Niam • Wat Noi, Suphan Buri (as per listing)
SKU: Not available
Price:
SGD 268
Luang Phor Niam (Wat Noi, Suphan Buri) name. For collectors, the main appeal is the blend of two languages:
Somdej-form (easy to recognise) plus the takrut association (usually pursued for protection and “locking” energy).
The clear front/back references make it a practical piece for comparison and documentation.
History & Background
This piece is presented as a Phra Somdej Kru with Nur Takrut designation, linked to
Wat Suwan (stated “Est. BE2460”) and blessed by Luang Phor Niam of Wat Noi, Suphan Buri.
In collector terms, “Kru” is usually read as a temple-storage / old-stock style narrative—where the priority is condition logic, material behaviour, and how well the details hold up under close comparison.
Because this listing uses multiple identity cues (Somdej-form + takrut association + monk blessing name), the sensible approach is to anchor on what can be checked visually first:
the pim silhouette, the powder/texture feel, and the overall ageing consistency across front and back—then treat the takrut narrative as an added character rather than a shortcut.
About “Nur Takrut” (ตะกรุด)
“Takrut” refers to sacred scroll talismans—traditionally inscribed, rolled, and empowered through chanting and ritual.
In the Thai amulet world, when a piece is described as Nur Takrut, collectors usually understand it as either:
(1) takrut being part of the amulet’s construction/presentation, or (2) the amulet being made to carry the “takrut-style” protective character in the lineage’s method.
Either way, the collector discipline stays the same: read the physical cues and match them with known examples.
- Function language: takrut is commonly associated with protection, blocking negativity, and “locking” energy.
- Collector check: look for coherent ageing and consistent handling marks (not mixed-era surfaces).
- Practical use: often carried for travel, worksite safety, and general daily protection—based on traditional belief.
Design / Pim Notes
As a Somdej-format piece, your quickest identification anchor is the overall pim proportion—the seated Buddha silhouette, tier rhythm, and base geometry.
Then compare the back: spacing, texture, and any “old-surface” tone that should match the front’s era feel.
When the front/back story reads as one coherent object—without visual contradictions—collector confidence usually goes up.
Traditional Spiritual Attributes & Metaphysical Properties
In Thai amulet culture, Somdej pieces are widely worn for steadiness and protection, while takrut-associated items are often pursued for stronger “shielding” character.
These are traditional beliefs shared among devotees, not guaranteed outcomes.
- Protection (คุ้มครอง): daily safety, smoother travel, and a stronger “guard” feel.
- Block negativity: traditionally used to reduce bad encounters and unwanted disturbance.
- Mind stability: calmer focus—useful for work pressure and decision-making.
Rarity Assessment & Collector Significance
“Kru” listings with takrut association tend to attract collectors who like old-era character and protective lineages.
Rarity, however, depends on specific batch provenance and what’s circulating, so it should be treated carefully.
What collectors can appreciate immediately here is the clarity of presentation: clean reference photos, coherent ageing cues, and a narrative that is stated plainly without over-selling.
Conclusion
If you want a Somdej-format amulet with a stronger protective “takrut” flavour and an old-stock “Kru” style story,
this Phra Somdej Kru (Nur Takrut) tied to Wat Suwan and blessed under Luang Phor Niam (Wat Noi, Suphan Buri) is a solid collector option—best appreciated through careful comparison and respectful daily use.
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