This is a beautiful Mahogany wood box with lid. This is lacquered Red Mahogany.
The base, the bottom of the box, is covered with claret-red hued self-adhesive velvet flocked jewelry box paper.
The hinged lid has a 6 inch square white tile that has been decorated with the Flower of Life design in a spectrum of colors.
Hold your valuables in this beautiful keepsake box. The inside is lined with ivory white velvet.
The box measures 7.125 inches square by 2.5 inches high.
The Flower of Life is an example of sacred geometric designs. Essentially, it is comprised of same size circles that overlap each other so that each side of the circle dived by the overlapping circle is the same radius. There are different kinds of geometric flower sacred patterns depending upon the grid shape used as a base, i.e., circle, square, triangle, etc.
A Flower of Life pattern decoration with seven overlapping circles shows up in numerous artifacts from the 6th or 7th century BCE forward in Roman art, Islamic art and in Gothic art.
The oldest example is on display in the Louvre in Paris. It is from the threshold of a palace that belonged to the King of Assyria.
The same pattern appears in Java, specifically a Hindu temple in Prambanan.
The design wasn't known as the Flower of Life though until our more recent New Age and now shows up on metaphysical objects, spiritual art, meditation mandalas, quilts, architecture, clothing, furnishings, tile, jewelry and tattoos.
There is an Alpine folk art design that is the same thing known as the Sun of the Alps. Later, the English used the symbol on their buildings to keep witches out.
Leonardo da Vinci, fascinated by sacred geometry symbols, wrote about the 7 overlapping circle design at great length.
Islamic art uses grids of overlapping circles for for the design of stars and hexagons. It is called a girih. The final art looks more like interwoven strips or straps than overlapping circles.
Code Near 77