
Click here to download the prayerwheel.
This is not an animated object, but rather I've set it spinning with a create rotate command. Below you can see a row of them rotating at different speeds. This is achieved by using different numbers in the command, eg: "create rotate 30" will turn ten times faster than "create rotate 3." I have used a variety of numbers to create a more realistic appearance.
The ends are textured from a scan of a small hand held prayer wheel and the mantra on the barrel comes from a website of digital prayer wheels. It represents the mantra om mani padme hum. Due to the nature of animated gifs the detail on this picture doesn't give a full idea of the elegance of the object. Please visit Subrosa to have a look at the item directly.

Tibetan Buddhists believe that saying the mantra (prayer) Om Mani Padme Hum, invites the blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion.
They also believe you can produce the same effect by spinning the written form of the mantra around in a prayer wheel (called "Mani wheels" by the Tibetans). The effect is said to be multiplied when more copies of the mantra are included, and spinning the Mani wheels faster increases the benefit as well.
His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, has said that having the mantra on your computer works the same as a traditional Mani wheel. As the digital image spins around on your hard drive, it sends the peaceful prayer of compassion to all directions and purifies the area.
Therefor, setting these spinning in your world will multiply the effect with each visitor who views the wheel.
When we can we have chosen to use standard AW textures for things to reduce your download requirements in your world and to reduce the size of your OP storage. In the event that a texture is overwriting the texture on your path, you are responsible for checking that it is the same as the one it is overwriting in image as well as name. We try to not name textures the same as those on the AW megapath if they are not the same as those textures.