Burnt Sienna Wall — 3 museum-grade prints in this palette. Warli painting is a tribal mural tradition of the Warli (Varli) Adivasi community in the North Sahyadri Range of Maharashtra and adjoining Gujarat — villages in Palghar, Jawhar, Dahanu, Talasari, and Mokhada where rice-paste white pigment on red ochre cow-dung or geru-coated walls recorded harvests, hunts, weddings, and daily labour. Women historically painted lagnacha chauk and dev chauk ritual squares for nuptial and festival occasions; tarpa circle dance appears in harvest-eve scenes with musicians at the centre — motifs this fusion piece deliberately omits because the subject is urban remote work, not ritual dance. Warli painting belongs to the Warli Adivasi community of the North Sahyadri range in Maharashtra — practiced in talukas including Dahanu, Talasari, Jawhar, Palghar, and Mokhada. Traditionally, women called Suvasinis painted interior hut walls with white pigment of rice paste, water, and gum applied using chewed bamboo sticks, over a ground of red geru soil and cow dung.