Lhasa collective

Lhasa collective Celebrating Tibetan culture through fashion. Traditional and contemporary styles for every occasion�

05/06/2026

Dolma — the wildflower of the grassland, a girl raised by wind and rain.

01/06/2026

Ganden Sumtseling Monastery
དགའ་ལྡན་བསམ་གཏན་གླིང་དགོན་པ།

Perched at 3,380m in Shangri-La, Yunnan, Ganden Sumtseling Monastery is the largest Tibetan Buddhist complex in all of Yunnan — a golden-roofed fortress of faith often called the Little Potala Palace. Founded in 1679 on a site chosen through divination by the 5th Dalai Lama, its gilded halls hold sacred thangkas, ancient scriptures, and the quiet devotion of some 700 monks. Where prayer flags meet mountain winds, the dharma endures. 🙏✨

31/05/2026

Tibetan raising prayer flags.

Tibetans of the Snow Land gather before holy Mount Kailash, raising prayer flags to the sky — an ancient offering of wind and color, carrying blessings across the sacred mountains.

30/05/2026

Lhasa — where the sky touches the sacred. 🏔️

The Potala Palace, the Jokhang Temple, the scent of juniper incense drifting through the Barkhor… this is Tibet’s holy capital, alive with faith and ancient beauty.

Some places don’t just take your breath away — the altitude does that too. ✨

23/05/2026

Dadon la’s rendition by Tenzin Chokyi from Toronto, Canada.

17/05/2026

🏔️ THE HEART OF TIBET — MOUNT KAILASH
གངས་རི་རིན་པོ་ཆེ།

Deep in the far west of Tibet, where the plateau stretches endlessly under a sky too blue to be real, stands the most sacred mountain on earth.
Kailash rises alone. No glacier crowns it. No climber has ever touched its peak — Tibet’s most protected secret, untouched by ambition, held only by prayer.

The kora around its base is Tibet’s most sacred circuit. Pilgrims from across the Himalayan world walk 52km through raw Tibetan wind, crossing the Drolma La at 5,636m — where old Tibet meets sky. Some prostrate the entire way. Every step is an offering.

Four rivers are born here — flowing out across Tibet and beyond into India, Nepal, China. Kailash is not just a mountain. It is the axis upon which Tibet breathes.

To stand at its foot is to understand why Tibet has always been called the roof of the world — and why that roof has a crown.

📍 Ngari Prefecture, Tibet Autonomous Region

16/05/2026

Where tradition meets the now.

A new generation of Tibetan dancers takes the stage in flowing chupa, weaving ancient hand gestures and footwork into a rhythm that pulses with the present. The chupa is more than a garment — it is heritage in motion, worn not to look back, but to carry the past forward with grace.
🏔️🎶🙏

14/05/2026

Western dance in Tibetan traditional clothing 🍀

Draped in centuries of Tibetan artistry — the pangden shimmering, coral and turquoise dancing at the throat, silver singing at the wrists — and yet the body moves to a rhythm the world now shares. This is what culture looks like when it is alive: rooted, fearless, and free. Tradition doesn’t stand still. It dances.


13/05/2026

The mountains taught him to move like the wind 🏔️

A young Tibetan dancer carries the soul of his ancestors in every step. His feet speak the language of ancient rituals, his arms trace the paths of sacred rivers, and his eyes hold the stories of a thousand years.

This is not just dance — this is identity, devotion, and freedom all at once. Watch how culture lives and breathes through the body of a child.

Some traditions were never meant to be kept in museums. They belong here — alive, moving, and glowing.

12/05/2026

The Tibetan khampa chupa
བོད་ཁམས་ཀྱི་ཕྱུ་པ།

The Khampa Chupa (ཁམས་པའི་ཕྱུ་པ།) is one of the most iconic garments in all of Tibetan civilization — a sweeping, full-length robe that has clothed the warriors, traders, and nomads of Kham for over a thousand years.
Originating in the rugged highlands of eastern Tibet (Kham region, spanning parts of present-day Sichuan, Yunnan, Qinghai, and the TAR), the chupa was engineered as much as it was tailored. Worn belted at the waist with a broad sash (སྐེད་རགས།), the excess fabric billows above the belt to form a deep front pouch — a built-in saddlebag that carries everything from tsampa to prayer beads to a folded dagger.

Khampa men traditionally wore theirs with one or both sleeves hanging loose, a mark of identity as distinctive as any flag. The fabric itself told your story: coarse wool for nomadic herders braving the plateau winds, fine silk brocade for chieftains and nobles, sheepskin-lined versions for mountain winters that can drop to -30°C.

The chupa is not merely clothing — it is a portable home, a social signal, a sacred garment worn to receive blessings and perform offerings. In a world without pockets, without luggage, and without walls to shelter behind, the Khampa chupa became civilization folded into cloth.

Today, Khampa men and women continue to wear the chupa at festivals, horse races (like the legendary Yushu Dralha Horse Festival), and religious gatherings — a living thread connecting the plateau’s past to its present.

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