In India, design has always been a part of everyday life. Indian Festive Decoration is very diverse and rich in terms of its graphical elements and patterns. Here is an attempt to document decorations that are readily available in the market, with varied forms and patterns. The main area where almost all kinds of decoration material is available in Mumbai is around Dadar station. Before every festival the area has lanes filled with decorations, which come from different parts of the country. The festivals covered were - Ganesh Chathurthi, Navratri, Durga Pooja, Dassera and Diwali.
The documentation consisted of lamps, lanterns, torans, pots, rangoli stickers, garlands. These were then visually analysed on the basis of shape, colour, level of intricacy, repeated patterns and motifs. The major recurring decorative elements were graphically reduced to basic elements. These were further used for creating patterns of various kinds.
For more details: http://www.dsource.in/resource/festival-patterns
Clay lamps made by using the form of a flower and its petals - these lamps are lit by using a wick which is dipped in oil. Metal tubes are fixed to the lamp so that the wick can pass through it and it doesn't move - asymmetrical design - material - clay, painted with acrylic paints/oil paints, glitter.
This lantern can be collapsed and becomes flat once folded. Its punched in some areas so that it looks brighter because of the bulb inside. - intricate/floral patterns and bright rainbow colours. The gradient indicates that these are computer generated images. - symmetrical design - material - paper.