A small symbol of fortune, dressed in the splendor of a Mughal garden.
Long before clovers became charms in western folklore, gardens of the Mughal courts were planted as living talismans — every bloom chosen for its meaning, every motif painted as a quiet prayer for abundance. This piece gathers both traditions into one form: four heart-shaped petals, each one a miniature paradise of lotus, iris, marigold, peony, and chrysanthemum, threaded through with the gilded vinework of old miniature painting.
Look closer and the artwork keeps unfolding. A pale lotus drifts at the heart of one petal, a coral peony opens in another, a sunlit marigold sits beside a silvered bloom — all suspended on a sea of deep teal and burnished gold. The detailing is patient and devotional, the kind of ornament that rewards a slow, second look.
It belongs in the rooms you return to — above the bed, behind a reading chair, at the threshold of an entryway where it greets the day like a small blessing. Available as a hand-stretched canvas or as a framed museum-quality print in your choice of black, red oak, or white frame.
The artwork concept was developed with AI assistance and refined through thoughtful artistic curation.
Canvas option (10″, 14″, 18″, 24″, 36″):
- 1.25″ (3.18 cm) thick poly-cotton blend canvas
- Canvas fabric weight: 10.15 +/- 0.74 oz./yd.² (344 g/m² +/- 25g/m²)
- Fade-resistant
- Hand-stretched over solid wood stretcher bars
- Mounting brackets included
Framed option (10″, 14″, 18″ in black, red oak, or white):
- Alder, semi-hardwood solid wood frame
- Museum-quality paper, 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) thick, 189 g/m²
- Matte finish with fade-resistant archival inks
- Shatterproof transparent plexiglass
- Hanging hardware included — arrives ready to mount