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What Does The “daisa” Mean On The Bottom Of A Lladro Figurine?

Submitted by on June 27, 2009 – 9:26 pm3 Comments

What does the "daisa" mean on the bottom of a lladro figurine?
what does the daisa mean on the bottom of a lladro figurine? I have two of the exact same lladro figurines and one says lladro daisa and the other one doesn't have daisa

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3 Comments »

  • iroc says:

    Wonhyo Daisa
    (born 617, Korea-died 686, Korea) Korean Buddhist priest. He was the first to systematize Korean Buddhism, bringing the various Buddhist doctrines into a unity that served both philosophers and laypeople. He advocated maintaining harmony between the real and the ideal in life in order to pursue spiritual goals. His works, mainly in the form of commentaries on Mahayana sutras, had profound influence on Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Buddhists. He is considered the greatest of the ancient Korean religious teachers and one of the 10 sages of the ancient Korean kingdom of Silla.

  • Charlie says:

    It means, fragile, do not turn upside down.

  • isis says:

    The latest backstamp, introduced sometime early in the the new The logo is no longer visually integrated with the name {lladro).
    That’s not all that’s separated: the phrase “by LladrĂ³” has been eliminated from the mark, leaving only the copyright acronym “DAISA” to identify NAO as a LladrĂ³ product. (The small print says “Hand Made Porcelain, Valencia, Spain,” followed by the copyright acronym and date.)

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