Purchase 50, 60 inches or larger sizes need to know:
Due to the complexity of craftsmanship required for large wood carvings, we recommend initiating the customization process through our dedicated customer service team. (Contact us at service@bgcopper.com) After expressing your design vision, our experienced craftsmen will work with you to finalize specifications, including dimensions, patterns, and finishing details. We will then issue a detailed quotation outlining a production schedule and payment terms. You can pay securely via bank wire transfer to ensure a seamless transaction experience. Begin your commission today and let our masterful woodworking skills fulfill your artistic desires.
Project Details:
Material: Ash Wood
Size: 101.6*60.4*6cm, 127*75.5*6cm, 152.4*90.7*8cm
Color: vintage colo
🌲 The Temperature of Faith: Sacred Resonance in Ash Wood
Touching the texture of ash wood with your fingertips is like touching the wheel of faith precipitated by time. The natural warmth of the wood, like the temperature of a believer's palm, transforms the sacred narrative into a palpable presence. Each wood texture tells us that this is not a cold object, but a carrier of life that has been passed down through thousands of years of faith.
When the gaze falls on the face of the crucifixion of Jesus, in the slightly drooping eyes under the crown of thorns, the look of pain and love intertwines straight to the soul. The sculptor reproduces the tremor of the Bible with the marks of his knife -- the tautness of the muscles is the struggle of humanity, the folds of the cloth tape are the mercy of divinity. The believer stops here and meets the gaze of the Savior, as if hearing the eternal echo of “Father, forgive them”.
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40 inches: It is the silent guardian of the kitchen wall in the scent of early morning coffee. As the housewife wipes down the stove, she lifts her eyes to see the face of the crucifixion, her fingertips caress the carvings on the edge of the cross, and in her exhaustion she gains the strength to go on.
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50 inches: The morning light from the chapel streams through the stained glass, creating dapples of light on the surface of the cross. As the choir sounds, the eyes of the faithful follow the “INRI” logo up to the head of Jesus, as if seeing the door of heaven open for the suffering world.
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60 inches: Under the dome of the cathedral, it is like a sacred covenant suspended in mid-air. As the organ reverberates in the gallery, the crucified body of Jesus emerges in the light, and believers kneel on bended knees, wet with tears -- the tremor of being struck by the gift of salvation.
The craftsman's knife infuses his faith into the wood when he makes the first cut. The sharp corners of the thorns sting the palm, but they are transformed into symbols of salvation in the artwork; the natural scars of the wood are just like the wounds of Jesus' crucifixion. This work is not a cold commodity, but an offering made by the craftsman with his life and faith, and every line is drenched with the desire for salvation.
If you look closely, there are undried tears hidden in the folds of the cloth tape, which are the tears of the sculptor for the hardship of faith late at night; and there is a fine gold dust embedded between the strokes of “INRI”, which symbolizes the divine rays of light shed during the crucifixion of Jesus. These hidden details are the unspoken signals between the believer and the Creator, which are suddenly revealed in a silent moment and become a thunderbolt in the depths of the soul.
Hung above a minimalist couch in a Brooklyn loft, the cross’s gaze spans two millennia. It watches the young professional stumble in after a soul-crushing day, sees the first-time mother light a candle beneath it, witnesses the Thanksgiving gathering where three generations bow their heads together. The ancient story of sacrifice continues to write itself into the fabric of contemporary life.
(At this moment, it is as if the cross is heard saying, “I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but rest assured that I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)