Through Prosperity, Rinkal Bagadia continues to champion the traditional crafts of Gujarat, bringing them into the spotlight of modern living. Her latest offering revives Lippan Art, the iconic mirror-and-mud mural work from Kutch, reimagined for interiors that blend heritage with elegant, minimalist design.
Back in 2020, Prosperity was just a small idea—a few earthy pots made during the stillness of lockdown. Now, with Rinkal Bagadia leading the way, it’s grown into a home for over 370 handcrafted pieces. The collection brings forgotten things back to light, like Pokhran clay, Sawai Madhopur’s black pottery, or the storycloths of Mata ni Pachedi. There’s something tender in how Prosperity treats these traditional crafts of Gujarat, helping them find their place again, especially in heritage Indian interiors that want more than just pretty things; they want meaning, memory, and something to hold onto.
Lippan Art Returns with Clay, Mirror and Memory
Lippan Art—mud, mirror, memory. This craft, originating in Kutch and passed down through generations by the Rabari, Meghwal, and Mutva communities, stands tall among the traditional crafts of Gujarat. Mirrors pressed into clay shaped by patient hands tell stories of wind, camels, flowers, and stars. Under Rinkal Bagadia’s vision, what once lived only on village walls now enters modern homes quietly, gracefully bringing with it light, texture, and a rooted kind of beauty.
There’s a quiet discipline in Prosperity’s Lippan Art collection. Mirrors pressed into clay, not rushed, not mass-made, just skilled hands doing what they’ve always done. The work is honest: built on waterproof bases so it lasts, shaped for spaces where it can belong. Some pieces are made just for a certain room, a certain wall. It’s that mix of old techniques, thoughtful design, and care that makes the collection feel not just decorative, but meaningful.
Traditional Crafts of Gujarat in Contemporary Interiors
The earthy clay and shimmering mirrors of Lippan Art bring a rare warmth and tactile depth to heritage Indian interiors. It’s more than surface beauty as these tiny mirrors bounce light across a room, catching shadows, brightening corners, and adding a quiet movement to the space. Whether in homes or modern commercial settings, its ability to merge craft with sustainability makes it an enduring favourite.
Designers are finding new ways to use it, placing large panels in foyers, tracing delicate patterns on tables and cupboards, or even introducing laser-cut Lippan partitions in open layouts.
At the heart of it all is Rinkal Bagadia, whose work through Prosperity helps local artisans stay rooted in their legacy. By reviving one of the most expressive traditional crafts of Gujarat, she’s not just decorating walls, she’s building futures and keeping cultural memory alive.
Rooted deeply in the soil of Gujarat, Lippan Art brings more than decoration; it brings a story to every space it graces. Its presence in heritage Indian interiors keeps alive the spirit and skill, bridging past and present.
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