The Ziynet Wooden Painted Door Panel is a page from a Rajasthani folk tale, painted in warm reds and golds and meant to be read slowly. This arched double-panel door, crafted from reclaimed wood, is covered top to bottom in hand-painted miniature scenes arranged in horizontal registers — sacred cows, dancing figures, musicians with instruments, devotees bearing offerings, ornamental urns, peacocks, sun motifs, and lush floral sprays.
Every figure is rendered in greens, blues, yellows, and whites against a deep terracotta red ground, with a golden-yellow painted border running along the arched frame and centre iron strap. The painting style is rooted in the Pichwai and Rajasthani folk traditions — devotional, narrative, and deeply personal to the hands that painted it.
Iron ring pull handles sit at the centre, iron strap hinges line the edges, and pivot pins at the base tell you this was once a real working door — most likely guarding a small temple or household shrine. Hang the Ziynet on a living room wall, above a console, in a pooja room, or as the anchor of a collected gallery wall. It fills a space not just with colour, but with story — the kind that gets richer every time you look.