Thai traditional art of Kinnaree by printing on sepia paper cards.

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The new art Kinnaree.

Handmade with a Kinnaree design on paper.
Then remove the Kinnaree design and then put into a sepia paper cards. By printing .

Size: Length 17.5 cm, width 12.5 cm

For a message to your loved ones.

Or your friends or people you know.

For those who can get this card would be nice.

When you see the artwork on the card.

In one piece free of envelope for the card.
All The Artworks are designed by Mr.Amorn Setthithorn who is a local Artist in Chiangmai,Thailand.

He is interested in tradition and shows it in his artworks so you can be sure that they are unique.

In Buddhist mythology and Hindu mythology, a kinnara is a paradigmatic lover, a celestial musician, half-human and half-horse (India) or half-bird (south-east Asia). Their character is clarified in the Adi parva of the Mahabharata, where they say:
We are everlasting lover and beloved. We never separate. We are eternally husband and wife; never do we become mother and father. No offspring is seen in our lap. We are lover and beloved ever-embracing. In between us we do not permit any third creature demanding affection. Our life is a life of perpetual pleasure.[1]
They are also featured in a number of Buddhist texts, including the Lotus Sutra. An ancient Indian string instrument is known as the Kinnari Veena.
In Southeast Asian mythology, Kinnaris, the female counterpart of Kinnaras, are depicted as half-bird, half-woman creatures. One of the many creatures that inhabit the mythical Himavanta. Kinnaris have the head, torso, and arms of a woman and the wings, tail and feet of a swan. She is renowned for her dance, song and poetry, and is a traditional symbol of feminine beauty, grace and accomplishment.

The Kinnari, (usually spelt 'Kinnaree' as noted below) (Thai: กินรี) in Thai literature originates from India, but was modified to fit in with the Thai way of thinking. The Thai Kinnari is depicted as a young woman wearing an angel-like costume. The lower part of the body is similar to a bird, and should enable her to fly between the human and the mystical worlds.
The most famous Kinnari in Thailand is the figure known as Manora (derived from Manohara), a heroine in one of the stories collected in "Pannas Jataka" a Pali tome written by a Chiangmai Buddhist monk and sage around AD 1450-1470. This is supposed to be a collection of 50 stories of the past lives of the Buddha, known to Buddhists as the Jataka. The specific tale about Manora the Kinnaree was called Sudhana Jataka, after Prince Sudhana, the bodhisattva who was also the hero of the story and the husband of Manora.
It has been speculated that the stories of Manora/Manohara told in Southeast Asia might related to the stories of the Cowherd and the Celestial Weaver Girl, popular in China, Japan and Korea.
The story inspired a dance called Manorah Buchayan, which is one of the most esoteric among the high classical dances of Thailand, as well as the "Norah" dance of southern Thailand.
Thai Airways International publishes a monthly magazine with the title Kinnaree.
The male counterpart of the female Kinnari is a Kinnon (Thai: กินนร).



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