Tibetan Singing Bowls.......

SB001 Διαμετρος/Opening 15,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 8 εκ. Βαρος/Weight 1200γρ. 105 euro











SB002 Διαμετρος/Opening 14,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 1080gr. 75 euro











SB003 Διαμετρος/Opening 15 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 1100gr. 85 euro











SB004 (3 tem/3 pcs )Διαμετρος/Opening 10,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 6εκ. Βαρος/Weight 500gr. 50 euro











SB005 Διαμετρος/Opening 10,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 6εκ. Βαρος/Weight 500gr. 50 euro











SB006 Διαμετρος/Opening 14,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 840gr. 75 euro











SB007 Διαμετρος/Opening 13 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 750gr. 65 euro











SB008 (2 τεμ.2 pcs ) Διαμετρος/Opening 14,5 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 920gr. 75 euro  











SB009 Διαμετρος/Opening 14 εκ. Υψος/Height 8εκ. Βαρος/Weight 900gr. 70 euro











SB010 Διαμετρος/Opening 13 εκ. Υψος/Height 6,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 690gr. 60 euro










SB011 Διαμετρος/Opening 13 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 960gr. 85 euro











SB012 Διαμετρος/Opening 15 εκ. Υψος/Height 7,5εκ. Βαρος/Weight 1020gr. 70 euro











SB013 Διαμετρος/Opening 20 εκ. Υψος/Height 10εκ. Βαρος/Weight 1140gr. 120 euro











(Η τιμη περιλαμβανει το μπωλ την λαβη και το μαξιλαρακι / Prices include bowl, handle and cushion )

What is a Singing Bowl?

Singing bowls awaken a beautiful and powerful mystery . . .
They produce the sacred sound of AUM
Their rich sonic vibrations alter space, mind, and time

They are used for meditation and for following the Yoga of Sound
The sound and music of the bowls awakens cellular memory
and permeates the aura with healing energy

What exactly are they?

The singing bowls originated in the pre-Buddhist, shamanic Bon Po culture of the Himalayas - often called "Tibetan" singing bowls, they are actually made in Bhutan, Nepal, India, and Tibet. They are ‘resting bells’ and, as such, part of the Bell family, which culture seems to date back to a Bronze Age in China some 4,000 years ago, which, at its peak, extended geographically as far as Burma and Indochina. However, Chinese and Japanese resting bells are made in a very different manner.



Some sources state that the bowls are made from the seven sacred metals, corresponding to the sacred seven planets: gold (Sun), silver (moon), mercury (Mercury), copper (Venus), iron (Mars), tin (Jupiter), antimony (Saturn), yet others that a selection (of anything from 3 to 9 - depending upon whom is being asked) from a total of nine metals was used (the seven listed above plus nickel and zinc) and yet another comprising twelve metals. Legend goes on to say that the iron was sometimes replaced by meteorite found on Himalayan mountaintops, metal from the heavens, or that meteorite was added also.



Unlike some of the other more familiar Tibetan sound-producing devices, whose use is well documented in the Tibetan Buddhist canon, there is absolutely nothing written about the singing bowls, even though they have been found in both monasteries and private homes. The sound resonating from these singing bowls is pure and very powerful in centring the mind and body. The Tibetans, when questioned about the use of the bowls, are vague, saying that the bowls are simply vessels for food – as indeed they have mostly become. However, I do find it hard to imagine that a bowl made of 7 metals including gold and silver, which can vibrate up to seven individual and simultaneous tones, each at its own consistent frequency, and can sustain such a rich vibration for literally minutes, was intended simply as a container for grain. And, again, certain bowls are designed with a very thick ‘lip’ (or rim), and this would be totally unnecessary were it intended simply for containing food, but is very significant for the sound qualities that it produces! Some accounts actually state that it is forbidden, even within the monasteries, to talk about the bowls and that the highest lamas used them in secret rituals to travel to other dimensions and other realms. The legends say further that the secrets of sound yield so much power that they must be kept hidden. It is also true that this path of sound (Nada Yoga) is not for everyone, including monks.

Whatever their original intended purpose, it is a happy coincidence for us that many of them resonate with certain altered brain states. It has been found that among the wave patterns of different singing bowls there is a measurable wave pattern that is equivalent to the alpha waves and/or theta waves produced by the brain. In such altered states we can become less aware of our physical body; have ‘visual’ experiences; experience ‘travelling’ to other dimensions; and even commune with E.T.’s or spirit guides. These bowls instil a sense of very deep relaxation and the experience of "inner space opening up". Whilst even the act of listening to the sound of a singing bowl stops one's internal dialogue, making the bowls an excellent tool for meditation, centring, and inducing shamanic trance states. The actual act of playing a bowl is a meditation in itself. Whilst playing bowls we can rise up into communion with the divine realm through entering into the mystical world of the muse of sound. Suitable bowls are used by sound healers to tone and balance the various energy bodies.



However, there is also a huge range of bowls – I have discovered 45 types so far. These consist of changes in their shape and construction producing a variety of different (psycho)-acoustic effects.

The very first, primary division places bowls into one of two families – Yin or Yang. Nonetheless, both ‘families’ of bowls can be played both ways: the yang and the yin way – although each type produces its own very distinctive sound.



It must also be said that the bowls fall into three categories regarding their sonic qualities. Amongst the highest category, certain ancient bowls are truly sacred and attuned to very specific energies, or they are otherwise designed to embody quite definite psycho-acoustic properties. However, not everyone is able to divine such subtle aspects.



And the bowls can even be used to make music, albeit music of a quite different ethic than our Western ears have grown accustomed to. The bowls' multi-tonal properties, rich overtones, their refusal to be contained within a musical ‘scale,’ and otherworldly sound challenge our very conceptions of music whilst also providing us with an opportunity to simply Play and thereby enter into the world of the Child of the Heart.



There are two basic ways of playing a singing bowl: you can either strike it with a mallet (there are a variety of these) for percussive, pulsating tones; or you can rub around the edge with a wooden ‘wand’ for a sustained effect (in a way similar to that of rubbing a finger around the edge of a wine glass). With both mallets and ‘wands’ the basic ‘rule-of-thumb’ is that the larger the bowl - then the larger the wand/mallet.

Resting the bowl upon the palm of your hand will usually enable you to appreciate the experience to a greater depth than placing the bowl on a pad or sandbag on a tabletop when using the mallet. Using the wand, we mostly find that, by just resting the bowl in the palm of the hand, the lower sounds will be accentuated, while dampening the bowl by bringing your fingers up lightly around the bowl will decrease the lower sounds and accentuate the higher frequencies, however, too high up and the sound disappears!



The pressure that you use to apply the wand onto the rim of the bowl will affect the sounds the bowl produces, as also will the speed with which you rotate the wand. It’s also true that the wood from which the wand is made makes a tremendous difference to the sound produced by the bowl. Too much or too little pressure, or the wrong speed, will cause a nasty ‘rattling’ sound that most people dislike - and a common complaint from novitiates.
(From http://www.frankperry.co.uk/Singing%20Bowls.htm )


Για παραγγελίες και διευκρινήσεις επικοινωνήστε στο παρακάτω τηλέφωνο/For orders and information, contact:
Tel. 0030-2331021715 Ethnic Shop-Aristotelous 3, Veria 59100 Greece

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