

This is an ancient Burmese/Myanmar couple that called "Puu Maan Yaa Maan" which means a couple of Burmeses/Myanmars. A woman wears a Luntaya sarong. (Water wave pattern fabric) in Burmese/Myanmar style, wears a shirt in the Tai Lue style. A man also wears Luntaya robes. He has a burmese man's turban with a hairbun. Also, he has a fashionable ear piercings and body tattoos for a bad luck prevention, especially at both thighs. A man touches a woman's shoulder, shielding his mouth and whispering words to her. Both has a naughty expression on their faces, like people who are in love or know each other well.

This woman is rich. She is a Lanna woman (Ancient Northern People in Thailand). She is holding a "Cigarette" or "Mulee Khi Yo" (Northern Thai cigarette made from banana leaves and dried tobacco, sticked together with bael fruit sap or sugarcane juice, roasted over low heat that sticky enough to bine the banana leaves together, the cigarette flavor mixed with crushed tamarind bark or wood sawdust, sometimes with dried flowers or other herbs). This picture was inspired by the ancient mural painting in Wat Phumin, Nan Province, Thailand.
An ancient northern Thai man with his ancient Thai undercut hairstyle. He also wears an artificial flowers on his earlobes. He is wearing a Chinese collar shirt with a Luntaya pattern (Water wave pattern fabric Burmese/Myanmar style) loincloth over the tattooed legs. He is holding a "Cigarette" or "Mulee Khi Yo" (Northern Thai cigarette made from banana leaves and dried tobacco, sticked together with bael fruit sap or sugarcane juice, roasted over low heat that sticky enough to bine the banana leaves together, the cigarette flavor mixed with crushed tamarind bark or wood sawdust, sometimes with dried flowers or other herbs)

The image of an ancient northern Thai couple, a young man and a young woman flirting with each other through smoking. According to the old saying that people in the past often say "Women like striped legs man, men like black colored teeth woman.” In the past, men tended to have “striped legs” or "tattooed legs” to show that they could tolerate a pain during inserting pigment into the skin to express their masculinity. As for women, they tended to chew a betel nut to tint their teeth until they turned into black color teeth to be beautiful and fashionable, which is a beauty standard in that time.

The Image of "Si Wai", a female character from the story of Gadthana Kuman Jataka. This graceful beauty got the nickname, "Mona Lisa of Nan City" or "A Beautiful Woman of Nan City." Siwai is in a glorious posture. She has her hairbun decorated with bright flower. Her earlobes are wearing gold scrolled earrings. The top of her body is naked, with only a cloth around her neck. Wanna Brahmin Jataka described the beauty of Siwai as the following words: Her eyebrows, like the waning moon, her lips as red as the light of the ruby. How could she be so beautiful?

The ancient hill tribes carrying their goods down from the high mountains. They were the hill tribes that lived in northern part of Thailand many hundred years ago. They were a hunter-gatherer that lived in the deep jungle and collected their natural goods down from the high mountain and went to the market in the small city in the past for trading. One of them had a goiter which is a common disease that can be found in people that live in the high mountain or the area that far from the ocean, because salt which full of iodine is the rare item for them to consume. This picture was inspired by the ancient mural painting in Wat Phumin, Nan Province, Thailand.