Deep Purple — 4 museum-grade prints in this palette. Jaipur is the capital of Rajasthan and a UNESCO World Heritage City, planned in 1727 by Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II around a grid of pink sandstone buildings. The Hawa Mahal honeycomb facade and Amber Fort hill palace are its most photographed landmarks — but Rajasthani visual culture also lives in everyday jharokha balconies, jali screens, and block-printed textiles that this poster abstracts into horizontal bands. Tantrik — one of five classical Madhubani style families alongside Bharni, Kachni, Godna, and Kohbar — is the Mithila tradition devoted to esoteric sacred geometry, yantra diagrams, and Shakta-Tantra symbolism rather than festival deity portraiture. Village artists in the Madhubani district translated Shri Yantra — regarded in Tantric texts as the king among yantras, a mathematical diagram of cosmic creation through Shiva-Shakti union — into folk panels where interlocking upward and downward triangles represent masculine and feminine divine principles meeting at the bindu centre. Varanasi is counted among the holiest cities in Hindu tradition and Jain pilgrimage, with the Ganges ghats serving as stages for daily ritual, bathing, and the famous evening aarti. Artists and tourism boards have rendered Banaras on travel posters since the colonial-era See India campaigns — this print sits in that lineage as contemporary interior art, not archival reproduction.