Garden Fresh — 2 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Kachni — from the Hindi word for hatching or line work — is the Madhubani style associated with Kayastha women's compositions in the Mithila region, distinct from Brahmin Bharni flat-fill deity panels and Dusadh Godna tattoo dot-and-dash. Kachni artists build texture through parallel strokes on petals, wings, water, and border grounds, applying colour washes sparingly while lampblack outlines hold every form. Bharni — meaning filling — is the Madhubani style historically associated with Brahmin women's compositions in the Mithila region, distinct from Kayastha Kachni line-hatching and Dusadh Godna tattoo dot-and-dash. Bharni artists outline figures in bold lampblack and flood interiors with vermillion, turmeric, green, and indigo pigments, often layering fine parallel hatch or stipple inside flat colour fields for texture.