The Korean American Coin Pendant, Tiger, Hibiscus & Red Pine was made to celebrate the Republic of Korea's (South Korea) heritage. The pendant is double-sided, purposely crafted with high detail, and adorned with a Laurel Wreath Border symbolizing victory.
One side states the Republic of Korea at the top and the same in Korean λνλ―Όκ΅ at the bottom. Three national symbols adorn the middle of the coin. The Korean Tiger (with its left ear resting on the border, the national animal), symbolizes strength, power, and superiority. The indigenous national tree, the Red Pine (an evergreen), at right, symbolizes national strength. The national flower, the Hibiscus (also known as the mugunghwa, or the Rose of Sharon), an object of deep affection, is known as the eternal blossom that never fades and rests below.
The reverse side of the coin pendant shows the resurrected Jesus Christ, with outstretched arms, as Lord over the nations, Lord over the United States of America (Flag) and the Republic of Korea (Flag), and can be worn close to the heart.
This exclusive Bradley Kellie pendant design was created in-house. The pendants are small batch hand casted (utilizing the lost wax method) and hand-finished. Due to our non-industrial manufacturing process, your piece may contain slight and unique variations from the image shown.
A complimentary plated cable chain (available in 18, 20, 22, or 24 inches), with lobster clasp closure, is included in matching antiqued silver or gold and attached to the pendant with a pinched gold filled or sterling silver jump ring.
Material: 24K Gold Overlay on Bronze
Made in the USA.
*Each Storytelling Chrisitan Pendant comes with a Storycard to share the meaning.
Bradley Kellie Christian Jewelry is designed to help you share your story, and tell HIS.
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νκ΅ λ―Έκ΅ λμ νλνΈ, νΈλμ΄, 무κΆν & μλ무λ λνλ―Όκ΅(νκ΅)μ μ μ°μ κΈ°λ νκΈ° μν΄ μ μλμμ΅λλ€. νλνΈλ μλ©΄μΌλ‘ μ μλμ΄ μμΌλ©°, μΈμΈνκ² μλμ μΌλ‘ μ μλμ΄ μμΌλ©° μΉλ¦¬λ₯Ό μμ§νλ μκ³κ΄ ν λλ¦¬λ‘ μ₯μλμ΄ μμ΅λλ€.
ν λ©΄μ μλ¨μλ Republic of Korea, νλ¨μλ μ΄μ λμΌνκ² νκ΅μ΄λ‘ λνλ―Όκ΅μ΄λΌκ³ μ°μ¬μ Έ μμ΅λλ€. μΈ κ°μ§μ κ΅κ° μμ§μ΄ λμ μ μ€μμ μ₯μνκ³ μμ΅λλ€. (μΌμͺ½ κ·κ° ν λ리 μμ μ₯μλ νκ΅μ κ΅κ° λλ¬ΌμΈ) νΈλμ΄λ 체λ ₯, ν, μ°μμ±μ μμ§ν©λλ€. μ€λ₯Έμͺ½μ 보μ΄λ ν μ’ κ΅κ° λλ¬΄μΈ μλ무(μλ‘μ)λ κ΅λ ₯μ μμ§ν©λλ€. κΉμ μ μ μ λμμ΄μ (무κΆνλ μ€λ‘ μ κ½μ΄λΌκ³ λ λΆλ¦¬λ) κ΅ν νλΉμ€μ»€μ€λ μ λ μλ€μ§ μλ μμν κ½μΌλ‘ μλ €μ Έ μμΌλ©° μλμͺ½μ μ리μ‘κ³ μμ΅λλ€.
λμ νλνΈμ λ°λλ©΄μλ μ κ΅κ°λ€ μμ μ£Όλ, λ―Έκ΅(κ΅κΈ°)κ³Ό νκ΅(κ΅κΈ°) μμ μ£ΌλμΌλ‘μ νμ λ»κ³ μλ λΆνν μμ 그리μ€λλ₯Ό λνλ΄κ³ μμΌλ©°, μ΄λ μ¬μ₯κ³Ό κ°κΉμ΄μ μ°©μ©ν μ μμ΅λλ€.
μ΄ νΉλ³ν λΈλλ€λ¦¬ μΌλ¦¬(Bradley Kellie) νλνΈ λμμΈμ λ΄λΆ μ μλμμ΅λλ€. ν΄λΉ νλνΈλ€μ (λ©νλ²μ νμ©νμ¬) μλμΌλ‘ μμμ μ£Όλ¬Όλλ©° μμμ μΌλ‘ λ§λ¬΄λ¦¬λ©λλ€. μ ν¬μ λΉμ°μ μ μ‘° λ°©μμΌλ‘ μΈν΄ μ¬λ¬λΆμ νλνΈλ μ¬μ§μ λνλ νλνΈμ μ½κ° λ€λ₯Έ κ³ μ μ νΈμ°¨κ° μμ μ μμ΅λλ€.
νλνΈμ ν¨κ» 무λ£λ‘ μ 곡λλ©° λμ€ν° ν€λ§μ΄ λΆμ°©λμ΄ μλ λκΈ μΌμ΄λΈ 체μΈ(18, 20, 22, 24μΈμΉ μ€ μ ν κ°λ₯)μ νλνΈμ λμΌν κ³ νμ€λ¬μ΄ μμ λλ κΈμμ΄ ν¬ν¨λμ΄ μμΌλ©° λλ₯Έ κΈμ λλ μμ κ³ λ¦¬λ‘ νλνΈμ μ°κ²°λμ΄ μμ΅λλ€.
μ¬λ£: κ³ νμ€λ¬μ΄ μμ(.925) λλ λμ 24K λκΈ
λ―Έκ΅ μ μ