Vermillion Rose — 12 museum-grade prints in this palette. Annakut ('mountain of food') is the great offering after Diwali in the Pushtimarg (Vallabh) tradition, when a heap of cooked dishes is offered to Shrinathji — the child-Krishna who lifted Mount Govardhan — at the Nathdwara haveli-temple in Rajasthan. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the deity to set the seasonal scene; this design borrows that grammar to frame a community bhandara. Janmashtami marks the midnight birth of Krishna; in the Pushtimarg (Vallabh) tradition centred at the Nathdwara haveli-temple in Rajasthan, the infant deity is placed in a decorated swing (jhula) and rocked through the night. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the deity to set such seasonal scenes. Kirtan and bhajan — devotional group singing — are central to Pushtimarg (Vallabh) practice, where seva to Shrinathji, the child-Krishna worshipped at the Nathdwara haveli-temple in Rajasthan, includes song as well as offering. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the deity to set the scene; here its radial lotus grammar frames a community singing circle.