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शिव परिवार • Divine Harmony in Pure Gold

Shiva Parivar Fine Gold 99.9 Frame

शिव पार्वती गणेश — 99.9 शुद्ध सोने की फ़ॉइल फ़्रेम

There are moments in every home that call for something sacred — a presence that blesses the space, strengthens family bonds, and connects you to something timeless. This Shiva Parivar frame, crafted in 99.9% fine gold foil on rich maroon velvet, captures the divine family in exquisite embossed relief: Lord Shiva with his trishul and crescent moon, Goddess Parvati in her grace, and young Lord Ganesha cradled between them. Encased in an ornate double-layered gold frame, it transforms any pooja room or living space into a sanctum of peace and prosperity.

Fine Gold 99.924K Gold FoilEmbossed ReliefOrnate FrameMaroon Velvet
Shiva Parivar Fine Gold 99.9 Frame — Lord Shiva, Parvati and Ganesha in 24K gold foil on maroon velvet with ornate double-layered gold frame | Swarn Shikhar Jewellers Chembur Mumbai

Product Details

Gold Purity

Fine Gold 99.9

Karat

24K Pure Gold Foil

Technique

Embossed Relief

Frame Type

Ornate Double-Layer

Full Specifications

Gold Content:99.9% Fine Gold (24 Karat) Foil
Artwork:Embossed gold foil relief on maroon velvet
Subject:Shiva Parivar — Shiva, Parvati & Ganesha
Outer Frame:Golden wood-grain with carved scroll pattern
Inner Border:Dark carved border with traditional wave motifs
Backing:Deep maroon velvet with protective glass front
Corner Motifs:Gold foil decorative floral accents
Display:Wall-mount or tabletop / mandir shelf
Size:Medium (~8" × 10" framed)
Packaging:Gift-ready box with protective padding

Why the Shiva Parivar Blesses Every Home

The Shiva Parivar — Lord Shiva, Goddess Parvati, and their sons Ganesha and Kartikeya — is revered across Hindu traditions as the embodiment of divine balance, cosmic harmony, and the ideal family. According to the Shiva Purana, Lord Shiva is both an ascetic yogi on Mount Kailash and a devoted householder (grihasta), demonstrating that spiritual depth and family life are not opposites — they complete each other.

Marital Harmony & Devotion

The union of Shiva and Parvati — represented in the Ardhanarishvara form as one being, half-male and half-female — symbolises the interdependence of masculine and feminine energies. According to the Devi Bhagavata Purana, Parvati is Shakti herself, the creative force sustaining the cosmos. Their bond teaches that neither energy exists independently; together they create harmony.

Wisdom & New Beginnings

Lord Ganesha, the elephant-headed son of Shiva and Parvati, is worshipped first before starting any new venture — be it a business, a home, or a journey. He is Vighnaharta, the remover of obstacles, and Buddhi Pradayaka, the bestower of wisdom. His presence in the Shiva Parivar ensures that every threshold you cross is blessed.

Protection & Cosmic Balance

Lord Shiva's trishul (trident) represents mastery over the three fundamental aspects of existence: creation, preservation, and destruction. The crescent moon on his forehead — received during the Samudra Manthan — symbolises calmness, cyclical renewal, and the elixir of immortality. His presence protects the household from negative energies and Vastu doshas.

Prosperity & Positive Energy

By worshipping the combined energies of Lord Shiva, Parvati, and Ganesha, tradition holds that one attracts all-round prosperity, progress, good health, and freedom from sins and sorrows. The gold medium amplifies this — in Hindu tradition, gold is the metal of the gods, associated with Goddess Lakshmi and the Sun, radiating auspiciousness.

How to Place & Worship This Frame

1

Placement (Vastu Shastra)

Mount on the northeast wall (Ishan Kona) of your pooja room or living space, at or slightly above eye level. The frame should face west or south, so you face east or north while praying. Avoid bedrooms, bathrooms, and south walls.

2

Daily Offering

Light a diya and offer fresh flowers, bilva (bael) leaves, and dhoop near the frame during morning or evening prayer. On Mondays — Shiva's day — offer milk, water, or panchamrit alongside your regular prayer.

3

Chant the Shiva Parivar Mantra

Recite "Om Namah Shivaya" 108 times, especially on Mondays and during Pradosh Kaal (twilight). For Ganesha, add "Om Gan Ganapataye Namah" — this invokes both father and son together.

4

Festive Adornment

During Maha Shivaratri, Shravan Maas, Ganesh Chaturthi, or Diwali, adorn the area with fresh marigold garlands, rangoli, and lights. Place seasonal fruits or sweets made with ghee as prasad.

Maha Mantra:

ॐ नमः शिवाय

Chant 108 times on Mondays for blessings of the entire Shiva Parivar

The Shiva Parivar in Sacred Texts

The depiction of Shiva as a family man is one of the most profound paradoxes in Hindu theology. The Shiva Purana describes him as both the great ascetic — smeared in ash, dwelling in cremation grounds, lost in meditation on Mount Kailash — and as a loving husband and father. This duality teaches that renunciation and worldly engagement are not contradictions but complementary paths to the divine. His marriage to Parvati, daughter of Himavat (the personification of the Himalayas), is celebrated as the cosmic wedding that restored balance after the self-immolation of Sati at Daksha's yagna.

In this artwork, the iconography captures this sacred narrative: Lord Shiva holds his trishul — whose three prongs represent the trinity of creation (Brahma), preservation (Vishnu), and destruction (Shiva) — while the crescent moon on his head recalls the Samudra Manthan, when the Devas and Asuras churned the cosmic ocean and Shiva received the moon as his share. The crescent symbolises cyclical time, inner calmness, and the soma — the elixir of immortality.

Goddess Parvati, seated beside him, is Shakti incarnate — the creative energy without which even Shiva is incomplete. The Devi Bhagavata Purana narrates how Adi Parashakti herself chose to be born as Parvati through Mount Himalaya and his wife Mena, performing intense tapasya to win Shiva's devotion. She represents fertility, marital devotion, and divine determination — the power that turns ascetic detachment into engaged compassion.

And between them sits young Ganesha — created by Parvati, restored by Shiva with the head of an elephant — the god who is worshipped first, before every puja, every journey, every new beginning. The Skanda Purana tells us that when a celestial mango was offered as a prize to whichever son could circle the world first, Kartikeya raced across the cosmos on his peacock, while Ganesha simply walked around his parents and said: “You are my world.” This scene — the divine family together on Kailash — captures that spirit of love, wisdom, and devotion that the Shiva Parivar represents to over 200 million Shaiva devotees worldwide.

Perfect Occasions to Gift or Buy

A Shiva Parivar in fine gold is more than a gift — it is a wish for harmony, protection, and divine blessings that last generations

Maha Shivaratri

The holiest night dedicated to Lord Shiva — falling on the 14th day of the dark fortnight in Phalguna. Gifting or installing a Shiva Parivar frame on this night is believed to multiply spiritual merit and invite Shiva's direct blessings into the home. Devotees observe fasting and all-night vigils.

Dhanteras & Akshaya Tritiya

The most auspicious days to purchase gold. Buying gold on Dhanteras honours Dhanvantari (the physician of the gods) and is believed to ensure year-long prosperity. On Akshaya Tritiya, any gold purchased never diminishes in value — making a fine gold Shiva Parivar frame both a spiritual and an enduring investment.

Griha Pravesh

Entering a new home? The Shiva Parivar is the ideal first frame to place in the mandir. Lord Shiva protects the home, Parvati nurtures its warmth, and Ganesha removes obstacles from the new chapter ahead. The gold itself symbolises Lakshmi's presence — the prosperity that follows where divine energy dwells.

Weddings & Anniversaries

Shiva and Parvati are the original divine couple — their union in the Puranas represents the ideal of marital devotion, balance, and eternal partnership. Gifting a Shiva Parivar frame at a wedding blesses the couple with the same divine bond. For anniversaries, it is a reminder that love, like the gods, endures.

Shravan Maas & Mondays

The holy month of Shravan (July–August) is dedicated entirely to Lord Shiva. Each Monday in Shravan carries special significance for Shiva worship. Installing or gifting this frame during Shravan amplifies the devotional energy already present in the household — especially on Shravan Somvar (Mondays).

Corporate & Personal Gifting

For business partners, new office inaugurations, or retirement gifts, a fine gold Shiva Parivar frame conveys wishes for prosperity and family well-being. Its real gold content, spiritual significance, and gallery-quality presentation make it a gift that commands respect and gratitude in any setting.

Craftsmanship & Quality

99.9 Fine Gold Foil — Not Gold-Plated

Unlike generic “gold-plated” or “gold-coloured” frames, this artwork uses genuine 99.9% pure gold (24 karat) foil — the same purity as investment-grade gold bars. The foil is produced by compressing pure gold into sheets thinner than a human hair, then carefully hand-applied and embossed onto the artwork surface. The result is a warm, luminous lustre that will never tarnish, fade, or discolour.

Embossed Relief Technique

The Shiva Parivar is rendered in embossed relief — a technique where the gold foil is pressed and shaped to create three-dimensional depth and texture. Every detail is captured: the trishul in Shiva's hand, the crescent moon on his head, Parvati's ornaments, Ganesha's elephant features, and the decorative floral corner motifs. This dimensional quality gives the frame its distinctive sculptural presence — it catches light differently from every angle.

Ornate Double-Layered Frame

The outer frame features a warm golden wood-grain finish that complements the gold foil artwork. The inner border is carved with traditional scroll and wave motifs in a rich dark tone — a design language drawn from Indian temple architecture. Together, the two layers create a gallery-quality presentation that elevates the artwork from a religious item to a decorative centrepiece.

Protective Glass & Velvet Backing

The artwork is set on a deep maroon velvet backing that provides a rich, regal contrast to the gold foil — a colour traditionally associated with Shakti and auspiciousness. A clear glass front panel protects the delicate gold foil from dust, moisture, and accidental contact while maintaining full visibility and lustre. The frame arrives sealed and ready for immediate display.

Care Instructions

Gold Foil Care

The 99.9 fine gold foil will never tarnish — gold is naturally resistant to oxidation. However, the foil is extremely thin and delicate. Never touch the artwork surface directly. If dust accumulates inside the frame over years, bring it to our Chembur store for professional cleaning and resealing.

Glass & Frame Care

Dust the glass exterior with a soft, dry microfibre cloth. Never spray liquid cleaner directly onto the glass — moisture can seep through the edges and damage the velvet backing. For stubborn marks, lightly dampen a corner of the cloth with distilled water and wipe gently. Clean the frame itself with a soft dry brush.

Placement Precautions

Avoid hanging in direct sunlight — prolonged UV exposure can fade the deep maroon velvet backing over time, though the gold foil itself is unaffected. Keep away from high-humidity areas (kitchens, bathrooms). For wall mounting, use appropriate hooks rated for the frame's weight to prevent falls.

Frequently Asked Questions

Fine Gold 99.9 means the gold foil used in this artwork is 99.9% pure gold — equivalent to 24 karat. This is the highest gold purity commercially available. The pure gold is processed into extremely thin foil sheets through a specialized compression technique, then carefully applied and embossed onto the artwork surface to create the detailed relief of Lord Shiva, Goddess Parvati, and Lord Ganesha. Unlike gold-plated or gold-coloured frames, this is genuine fine gold that retains its warm lustre permanently.

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