Your home and how you decorate it speaks volumes about your taste and style. From the nooks and crannies to the centerpieces and tables, each element represents your aesthetics. For many of us, the minimalism of the modern age is the preferred home decor style, but there are others who wish to keep things traditional.
These are the people who are in love with their culture and heritage and are mesmerized by the royalness of Indian decor. If you are someone who wishes to create interiors that transport you back in time, treat this curated list blog as your mood board and assistant to pick some of the best Indian home decor for your home. Whether you are a full-blown fan of traditional decor or someone who dabbles in vintage decor, this read is for you.
As a period of celebrations and festivals comes close, we all start planning to purchase the best home décor to prepare our houses for the joyous days ahead. The task of getting the perfect home décor does not have to be a task as such. Visit Exotic India Art, where a dedicated collection of traditional and modern Indian home décor, curated under a useful section is created, especially for times like this, when you should be working less, and enjoying more! Inspired by the grandeur of forts, palaces, and temples, besides rich handicrafts from different regions of the country, the traditional Indian decor never goes out of style. You can incorporate these ideas to effortlessly lend an ethnic flavour to your house.
From the moment we open our eyes, we see the world in terms of its colors. The Sun is yellow, the sky blue, the earth is green, and an orange is orange! In ancient civilizations all over the world, certain colors became synonymous with virtue and remained so for centuries. Thus red is universally symbolic of strength, life, power, and passion. Black conveys mysteries, death, the eternal void, and unparalleled strength, and white as its complementing half is light, life, and purity.
"Jahangir the fourth Mughal emperor (r. 1605-27), was a lover of beauty, be it that of an artifact created by human hands or that observed in nature, the work of god. His memoirs, commonly known as Tuzuk-I-Jahangiri or, Jahangirnama, are as much an album of his aesthetic experiences as a chronicle of his reign. With his keen sensibility, these experiences were a permanent source of joy for him. Nature and beauty were preserved through the brush of his artists."
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