




Tibetan Altar Butter Lamp | Buddhist Offering Light
100% AUTHENTIC
HANDMADE
FREE SHIPPING
Couldn't load pickup availability
Sacred Altar Butter Lamp | Ritual Offering Lamp for Meditation
------------------------------------------------
Size: 9.5cm(Height) x 10.5cm(Diameter)
Base: 6.5cm
Inner Depth: 4cm
Weight: 0.3kg
Materials: Brass, Copper
------------------------------------------------
About Our Product
This Sacred Altar Butter Lamp measures 9.5cm in height with a 10.5cm diameter, a 6.5cm base, and 4cm inner depth. The lamp weighs 0.3 kg. Crafted from brass and copper, this ritual offering lamp is designed for Buddhist altars, meditation rooms, and shrine settings. Its wide bowl accommodates butter or oil offerings, making it suitable for daily devotional practice and ceremonial use.
The lamp features a rounded bowl with a smooth upper rim and a decorative brass band encircling the midsection. The pedestal base is shaped with layered contours inspired by Himalayan craftsmanship, reflecting traditional Tibetan ritual design. The harmonious blend of copper and brass tones enhances the sacred aesthetic, while the elevated bowl structure follows classical butter lamp forms used in Vajrayana and Mahayana traditions. Offering light symbolizes the removal of ignorance and the cultivation of wisdom within Buddhist practice.
This Sacred Altar Butter Lamp is ideal for Tibetan Buddhist altar décor, Vajrayana ritual offerings, meditation space decoration, and Himalayan spiritual collections. Perfect for those searching for brass butter lamps, altar lighting, and Himalayan Buddhist ritual art, this handcrafted butter lamp supports devotional ceremonies and sacred meditation practices.
Introduction To The Butter Lamp :
The whole process of offering a butter lamp is also a very spiritual practice. The traditional practice of preparing a butter lamp starts by washing one’s hand, wearing a mask to protect from contaminating the butter lamp through one’s breath, making the wick out of pure cotton, and cleaning the chalices with a clean piece of cloth reserved for this or fresh mosses from the trees, which was commonly used in old times. The whole process is a meditative spiritual practice, which engages a person both physically and mentally, if the person knows and practices it according to the norms.
























































































































































































































































































