'Mayuri' Photo Frame in Wood
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Etymology
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Provenance
Mayuri is the teal expression of the Amrapali workshop range from Jodhpur — the same painted wood tradition as Haldi, Ksheer, and the Abeer frames. Wood shaped to a standard profile, painted in layered hand-applied colour, then worked with applied decorative motifs that build the jewelled surface quality. The teal ground requires more preparation than the ivory or beige variants — a blue-green of this depth needs multiple base coats before it reads correctly.
The blue-green of the peacock has been present in Indian craft and painting for as long as records exist: in Mughal miniature backgrounds, in the dyed cottons of Rajasthan, in the glass bangles of Firozabad. It is a colour that carries natural precision — everyone in India knows exactly what peacock blue means — and the workshop tradition of Jodhpur has used it in painted wood objects precisely because of that clarity.
As with all handcrafted objects, slight variations in colour, surface finish, and dimensions are inherent to the making process — evidence of the hand, not defects.
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