DESIGN BRIEF: The brief was to land a utility-scale turbine inside Mithila line grammar without letting the nacelle read like a pasted engineering clip art on a folk border. Kachni made sense because Bharni flat fill would flatten the blade geometry into toy shapes; what the subject needed was parallel stroke density on the tower bands and longitudinal hatching on the airfoils — the same Kayastha patience that once textured paddy terraces and banyan bark now textures steel. Vertical-bilateral symmetry solves the layout problem: a diagonal turbine would fight the lotus-bud border repeat; a centred column with mirrored acacia flanks turns the machine into a threshold figure between two guardian trees, the way Kohbar walls frame bamboo groves. We placed a Surya-style sun disk behind the hub — not because the panel claims solar panels, but because Mithila celestial disks already symbolise generative power; wind and sun share a halo without breaking folk rules. Desert ochre hill segments ground the scene in Kutch and Gujarat wind-corridor palette rather than generic green pasture, and the triple lotus register at the base re-anchors renewable infrastructure inside classical abundance symbolism.