Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
Bound Koru Breastplate
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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bound Koru Breastplate

Bound Koru Breastplate

Regular price
$3,500.00
Sale price
$3,500.00
Regular price
Sold
Unit price
per 
Tax included.

This Koru breastplate pendant is 38mm long and 68mm wide.  It has been carved from pounamu we have collected from the Marsden Valley in the Paroa Area just outside of Greymouth, on the West Coast of the South Island in New Zealand. 

The Koru Breastplate has an extremely strong waxed nylon cord so the pendant can be worn ALL the time - even in any kind of water.  It is four strands of cord that have been hand platted into a special, round, 4-plait.  The cord is adjustable by pinching the special knots between your thumb and finger and pulling.  

On one side of the breastplate is the traditional ridge-knot binding.  This was one of the bindings used by the Maori to attach the pounamu to wooden and bone handles to use as tools and weapons.

Pendant Meaning:  The Koru's can represent a person.  Or the ancestors, the present generation and the future generations - your elders, yourselves and your children and/or grandchildren. The Koru shows their lives coming together in love, friendship and harmony.  

The Koru represents the new shoots of the fern plant opening so it symbolises growth, harmony and new beginnings.

It also represents the family as a whole, an individual person, an event, time, place, accomplishment or achievement that has happened in your life.

They were traditionally tattooed on the body and carved in the main poles and panels in the Whare/house.  The Maori had an oral language.  They told their life story from the Koru's that had been carved and tattooed.  It is up to the person to tell the story of what their Koru represents.