Domestic Devotion — 3 museum-grade prints that set the mood. In Pushtimarg (the Vallabh tradition centred at Nathdwara, Rajasthan), seva of Shrinathji — the child-Krishna Govardhan-lifter — begins in the kitchen, where bhog is cooked fresh before darshan. Makhan-mishri, fresh butter with sugar crystals, is Krishna's most beloved offering, tied to his childhood as the makhan-chor. On Sharad Purnima, the autumn full-moon night, families leave kheer (milk pudding) out under the moon, believing the moonlight blesses and sweetens it — a gentle domestic custom tied to the same full moon as Krishna's raas-lila. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the Shrinathji deity to set the festival scene; this fusion borrows that grammar for the family moon-kheer ritual. Pushtimarg homes keep a dressed Thakurji — a small Krishna icon served through the day with fresh clothes, food and lamps, exactly as the Nathdwara haveli serves Shrinathji. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the deity to set the scene; here the cloth frames a household shrine.