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{K:6282} 1/11/2006
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Very cool idea - work superbly well - true alchemy, making the rock flow!
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Mark Sherman
{K:15669} 1/4/2006
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Went to a Buddhist temple and saw this marking used in their reliefs. I always thought they used it as a good luck symbol. So sad to see it used by the Nazi's. The swirls feel like fish.
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Yutaka Itinose
{K:22586} 1/4/2006
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it'a Kanji font,very easy to find--only entering 'manji'on my key board.
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 1/4/2006
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wow Yutaka how did you find it as a font?!! '卍'
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Yutaka Itinose
{K:22586} 1/4/2006
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HmmmHn--,shaking I think '卍' I like,as a symbol of the sun.
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 1/4/2006
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(How's this sun by the way?)
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The Sun |
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 1/4/2006
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(How's this sun by the way?)
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Rashed Abdulla
{K:163889} 1/4/2006
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wonderful image,great in b/w,beautiful details and contrast,very best regards.
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Yutaka Itinose
{K:22586} 1/4/2006
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Nice symbolized abstract,we call it MANJI(in Japanese and Svastica in Sanskrit,means curly hair on the Buudha's breast,the symbol of charity and satisfaction),but the direction of it's rotation is usually reverse as Hakenkreuz(anti-clockweis),nowadays used the symbol of the buddist temple.
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Fabio Keiner
{K:81109} 1/4/2006
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:)) the swastika was a sun symbol!! (mainly used in early chinese ornaments) all depends on the direction of its spin, I read. (the nazis took the wrong direction: also in this aspect illiterate fakers) another explanation says that the swastika sign was an abstraction of sexual intercourse ('swastikas' means 'horny cock' in old lithuanian:)) nevermind, that stone swirl certainly will attract new-agers of all ages in their thousands, imho
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