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World Mandalas: 100 New Designs for Coloring and Meditation

World Mandalas: 100 New Designs for Coloring and Meditation

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Author: Madonna Gauding
Publisher: Godsfield
Category: Book

List Price: $17.95
Buy New: $12.21
You Save: $5.74 (32%)



New (5) Used (7) from $10.01

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 40471

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 9.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 1841812579
Dewey Decimal Number: 203.7
EAN: 9781841812571
ASIN: 1841812579

Publication Date: February 28, 2006
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Beautiful and enlightening, these classical mandalas include rose window designs from the cathedrals of Europe, Navajo sand paintings, Hindu yantras, traditional Buddhist thangka scroll designs, and motifs from illuminated Celtic manuscripts. As a symbol of the spiritual journey, the mandala expresses our yearning for the sacred and for knowledge and experience of the infinite. By coloring mandalas, we become focused on their complex symmetry and come to contemplate the divinity at our own center. With detailed directions on coloring techniques — either on the page or the computer screen—as well as charts explaining Chinese and Hindu color symbolism, this collection offers an irresistible invitation to a rewarding creative activity which is also a rich meditative experience.





Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Great for kids!   September 20, 2008
Great for kids. This book has easy to color as well as more complex designs - something for the artist in everyone. :-)


4 out of 5 stars freefledgling   June 15, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I am very pleased with this book of mandalas. I only wish that it came in a spiral bound book so that it would be easier to color and not to bend the pages by accident. I put heavy books on it every night to try to keep the colored pages flat.


3 out of 5 stars Nice but . . .   September 30, 2007
 17 out of 17 found this review helpful

This book has nice designs--and lots of them. Also, there's one design per page; they're NOT printed back-to-back like all of the Dover Coloring Books--I mostly use markers to color and they bleed through the page onto the next design if back-to-back rendering the next design unusable. However, this book is hard-bound, not spiral bound like Susanne Fincher's wonderful 3 volumes. I like to fold the book back on itself so I can color--and you can't do that with this one.


4 out of 5 stars World Mandalas: Cultural captions and more   January 22, 2007
 10 out of 12 found this review helpful

Very inspiring book. Mandalas from different cultures allow for an insight to the core of these cultures and for the establishment of a relationship between symbols and archetypes. And of course there is always ample room for creative ventures through coloring.


5 out of 5 stars 100 Mandalas From Five Spiritual Traditions   September 5, 2006
 34 out of 36 found this review helpful

"Mandalas symbolize the presence of the sacred in the realm of the mundane. Mathematicians tell us that the point at the centre of a circle is dimensionless. This `essence' is contained within a limited space bounded by a circumference. Thus, by its very nature, the mandala is a symbol of the boundless and the eternal at the heart of circumscribed everyday reality." - From the book

From the Pantheon in Rome to Chartres Cathedral in France, from the exquisite images painted by the 11th century Benedictine abbess Hildegard of Bingen to Hindu yantras, sacred circles appear in architecture, art, and even nature itself. Mandalas, a word derived from the Sanskrit word meaning "circle" or "sacred center", are universal patterns that serve as symbols of wholeness, well being, time, community, nature, and the spiritual journey.

According to author Madonna Gauding, by contemplating the mandala, we discover the divinity at our own center. In her book World Mandalas: 100 New Designs for Colouring and Meditation, Gauding explains the role of mandalas in five traditions: Hindu, Buddhist, Christian, Celtic, and Native American. The first part of the book, illustrated with vibrant, full-color images, introduces readers to the various expressions of mandalas, including how they serve as powerful spiritual and psychological symbols. Gauding also describes the many meanings of color as viewed by Chinese medicine, traditional associations, and the Hindu chakra system.

Why color mandalas? Besides being an enjoyable pastime, the author expresses that coloring intricate designs demand mental focus akin to the concentration you can develop through meditation. This focus can allow unconscious thoughts and feelings to emerge, as well as flashes of inspiration and solutions to problems. The author provides ten ways to use coloring mandalas:

1.Relax and center for stress relief
2.Establish your true self
3.Feel integrated and whole
4.Face up to problems
5.Problem solve
6.Generate creativity
7.Learn from color choices
8.Share your best self
9.Find your spiritual path
10.Heal yourself

For example, if you feel overwhelmed by the many roles you play, you could color a mandala to feel integrated and whole. Gauding suggests choosing a mandala with a complex design, then write down a list of the many roles you play in life. Then list both positive and negative qualities associated with those roles. Begin coloring the mandala, using as many shades and techniques as you can. After completing the design, take a moment to reflect on these roles and qualities. Do you feel more accepting and loving of who you are? she asks.

World Mandalas provides 100 blank mandalas from five spiritual traditions for coloring and meditation. They are large and easily reproducible using a scanner or photocopier. The mandalas are one-sided, so you don't have to worry about color bleeding through if you use markers or paints. (Although I'd recommend putting paper between pages, just in case.)

I have carpal tunnel syndrome in my writing hand, so coloring mandalas can be quite painful. However, I enjoyed coloring one of the Hindu mandalas with watercolor pencils, which depicted "the five ingredients for Tantric practices". I found all of the mandalas to be quite beautiful; I could feel a sense of peace just looking at them in an uncolored state! I wish I didn't have CTS so I could color mandalas as I used to; I find the process very calming and centering. It is, indeed, akin to meditation. I own several mandala coloring books, and I believe World Mandalas by Madonna Gauding has the most contemplative, attractive mandalas of them all. Highly recommended!


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