Rhythmic — 33 museum-grade prints that set the mood. DESIGN BRIEF: the brief was the women's pot dance, so the hero is full-width rows of dancers each balancing a stack of pots on her head, knees bent into the step, with barrel-drummers anchoring the ends of the rows. We held the fill to medium and kept the fish-net frame open rather than a packed mesh, leaving clear deep-maroon ground between the rows so the balanced pots and the bent-knee bodies read at a glance and never blur into one mass. Kalighat Pat grew up in 19th-century Kolkata, painted by patua (chitrakar) scroll-painters who settled near the Kalighat Kali temple and sold quick watercolours to pilgrims. Alongside gods and goddesses they painted the everyday and performing people of Calcutta — musicians, dancers, fish-sellers and dandies — in the same economical brush, which is why the form is often called India's first modern popular art. Aipan is the ritual floor- and wall-art of the Kumaon region of Uttarakhand, made traditionally by Kumaoni women with white rice-paste (biswar) drawn by fingertip onto a geru — red-ochre earth — ground. For Harela, seven grains are sown in baskets about ten days before the monsoon and grow into the pale sprouts that name the festival; sowing and the coming rain are the heart of the rite.

$49