Celebrate auspicious beginnings with our sacred Ganesha collection Prasaad Mudrika, handmade with love from flowers once offered at His temples. These sacred offerings are given new life through sustainable craftsmanship, making each piece both devotional and earth-friendly.
The Mudrika features a beautifully detailed Ganesha with his trunk, symbolizing the cooling nurturing energy of the moon, radiates grace and presence. Place it on your car dashboard, home altar, desk, or gift it to loved ones—the coin comes with a magnetic stand and double-sided tape for effortless installation, making it an everyday sacred essential.
Before every journey, every beginning, every important word spoken — there is Ganesha. Not as an obstacle-remover invoked in desperation, but as the one who is present at every threshold, always already blessing you forward.
Left-Trunk · Siddhi Form
Kalamkari Art Style
Ganesha Collection
Magnetic Stand Included
🐘
Left-Trunk Ganesha — The Siddhi Form
The rarer, more powerful form for household worship. Associated with siddhi — the fulfilment of intentions — and the nurturing lunar energy of the ida nadi.
This Ganesha Prasaad Mudrika features the left-trunk form of Ganapati — a rare and auspicious posture associated with siddhi, the fulfilment of intentions — rendered in vivid Kalamkari style by artist Satyadip Vandere. The left trunk curves toward a modak, symbolising the sweetness of spiritual reward earned through devoted practice.
Handcrafted from flowers once offered at Ganeshji temples, the base carries the memory of real puja. The scalloped stone-textured border frames the deity like a temple sanctum. Place it on your car dashboard before every journey, on your desk before every important task, or on your home altar as a permanent welcome of grace.
What's in the Box
- 1 × Prasaad Mudrika — Ganesha Blessing (Rectangle)
- 1 × Magnetic display stand
- 1 × Double-sided tape strip for flat surface mounting
✦ ✦ ✦
The Left Trunk — Why It Matters
This Mudrika · Left Trunk
Siddhi Ganapati
Associated with the ida nadi — the cooling, nurturing lunar energy. The form connected to the fulfilment of wishes, spiritual progress, and creative accomplishment. Preferred for household worship and home altars. Rare and considered more powerful for daily devotion.
For reference · Right Trunk
Shakti Ganapati
Associated with the pingala nadi — the active, solar energy. More commonly seen in public temples. Suited for intense spiritual practice and external action. Less common in household shrines.
Kalamkari — The Art of the Sacred Story
Kalamkari is one of India's oldest living art traditions, originating in Andhra Pradesh, where artisans used pens made from bamboo and tamarind to draw sacred narratives on fabric and surface. Every element in a Kalamkari image follows a precise visual grammar — the posture of the deity, the surrounding flora, the colour of each ornament. No line is arbitrary. No colour is decorative for its own sake.
Satyadip Vandere's rendering of Ganesha honours this tradition with precision — bringing its richness into a format that can live in everyday spaces without losing any of its sacred weight.
A Flower for Every Blessing
The material of this Mudrika was once an offering — marigolds, hibiscus, and jasmine placed before Ganesha in temples across India. After fulfilling their purpose at His feet, they were gathered by Pushpam artisans and given a second life in the very object that now carries His image.
The blessing that went into those flowers at the temple has not left them.
✦ ✦ ✦
SV
Satyadip Vandere
Master Craftsperson · Pushpam Collective
Art Inspiration: Kalamkari — the ancient pen-and-chisel sacred art of Andhra Pradesh
Key Features
Left-Trunk Ganesha — Siddhi Form
Rare and auspicious — associated with the fulfilment of intentions and nurturing lunar energy
Kalamkari Artwork by Satyadip Vandere
Intricate, vivid, traditionally structured — inspired by the 2,000-year-old Andhra Pradesh art form
Upcycled Ganeshji Temple Flowers
Marigold, hibiscus and jasmine offerings from Ganeshji temples form the base of every piece
Scalloped Stone-Textured Border
Frames the deity like a temple sanctum — gives the Mudrika a sacred, architectural presence
Magnetic Stand Included
Upright display on any desk, pooja shelf, or altar — stable on all flat surfaces
Double-Sided Tape Included
Secure mounting on car dashboards — auspicious before every journey, no extra purchase needed
Compact · 6 cm × 7.5 cm · 41 gms
Small enough to carry, present enough to matter — on the dashboard, desk, or altar
Verified Sustainability Impact
250 gms flower material recycled · 700 gms CO₂ emissions avoided per piece
250
gms recycled
Average flower material upcycled per piece
700
gms CO₂ saved
Average carbon emissions avoided
100%
Temple sourced
Authentic Ganeshji temple flower origin
Specifications
| Dimensions |
6 cm × 7.5 cm |
| Weight |
41 gms |
| Top Material |
Upcycled Flower Composite |
| Base Material |
Recycled POP & Upcycled Flower |
| Art Style |
Kalamkari |
| Artist |
Satyadip Vandere |
| Collection |
Ganesha |
| Includes |
Magnetic stand + double-sided tape |
Use & Care
How to Use
- Attach to car dashboard using double-sided tape — auspicious before every journey
- Place upright on desk, home altar, or pooja shelf using the magnetic stand
- Gift for new beginnings — business launches, new homes, new vehicles, exams
- Place at the entrance of a room or office as a permanent blessing threshold
Care Guide
- Wipe gently with a dry cloth only — avoid water and wet cleaning methods
- Sunlight or heat may slightly soften the base — it firms up once cooled
- Handle the Kalamkari print surface carefully to preserve colour and line detail
- Keep away from direct flame and incense smoke on the surface
✦ ✦ ✦
Before you ask, We've Answered!
What is the significance of the left-trunk Ganesha?
Left-trunk Ganesha is associated with the ida nadi — the nurturing, cooling lunar energy — and with siddhi, the manifestation of spiritual and material intentions. He is considered the most auspicious form for household worship and home altars, preferred for devotees seeking spiritual progress, creative success, or the fulfilment of heartfelt goals. Right-trunk Ganesha is more common in public temples; the left-trunk form is rarer and considered more powerful for daily home devotion.
What is Kalamkari art?
Kalamkari is an ancient Indian art tradition from Andhra Pradesh, in which artisans use a bamboo pen to draw sacred figures and narratives using natural dyes. Every posture, ornament, and floral element follows a precise traditional grammar — no line is arbitrary. Satyadip Vandere's work on this Mudrika is inspired by this tradition and honours its visual precision.
Is this made from real temple flowers?
Yes. The base is a composite made from marigold, hibiscus, and jasmine flowers collected from Ganeshji temples after worship. These are dried, ground, and shaped into the Mudrika by Pushpam artisans. The origin is authentic and traceable to real temple offerings.
What is the modak shown in the image?
The modak — a sweet dumpling — is Ganesha's most beloved offering and is traditionally shown near His trunk in iconography. It symbolises the sweetness of spiritual reward earned through sincere devotion. Its presence in the image makes this a particularly complete and auspicious representation of Ganapati.
Is this the right gift for Ganesh Chaturthi?
Ganesh Chaturthi is the most natural occasion for this gift. The combination of authentic temple flower origin, Kalamkari art, and the left-trunk siddhi form also makes it deeply meaningful for Diwali, new home inaugurations, new vehicle blessings, business launches, and any occasion marking a new beginning.