View allAll Photos Tagged rajasthani
According to Google, A Rajasthani Wooden Guard (or Chowkidar/Darbaan) is a traditional, hand-carved wooden figurine from India symbolizing protection and heritage, depicting royal guards in traditional attire.
There was another on the other side of the doorway of this restaurant, but I didn't get a picture of both that I liked.
CC Most Versatile: Red
For Crazy Tuesday theme "Made of Wood"
Candid portrait of a Rajasthani Woman with facial piercings at the Pushkar Mela. Taken with the Sigma 135mm Art Lens, love the bokeh and background blur with this lens.
Rajasthani traditional cloth belts with embroidered mirror work, on display at the Anjuna Flea Market in Goa, India.
I was heading down to Amber Fort and I noticed some people gathered on a side of street. I was curious to see what’s out there and started walking up to that direction as I was getting close a melodious violin sound of a familiar Bollywood song was also getting louder.
I couldn't believe a handmade violin can produce such amazing sound…, well I would say it was in such incredible hands, the fingers were moving flawlessly and the man was smiling and performing so calmly. The people gathered around were so quiet and enjoying the beautiful performance.
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A Rajasthani camel driver proudly poses with his animal. Camels are divided into Dromedary (one hump) and Bactrian (two humps). The camels in the Thar Desert are dromedaries. A common misconception is that the humps are used to store water. A camel's hump(s) is actually composed of fat, and when needed, the fat is converted to food and water. As it is used up, the hump deflates and droops until it can be refilled. Because camels are well suited for the desert and can go up to 2 weeks without water, they were called "ships of the desert" during the days of the Silk Road.
Street photo of a local Rajasthani Man in a vibrant orange jumper feeding the pigeons on a Ghat in Udaipur, India.
Two Rajasthani boys wearing Vendetta masks shot candidly in front of their horse at the 2023 Pushkar Mela.
Pushkar, Ajmer, Rajasthan, November 2018
Pushkar Camel Fair, Kartik Mela is an annual 5-day livestock fair (camels, horses, cows, sheep and goats) in the rural Rajasthan mountain town of Pushkar, attracting between 200,000 and 500,000 visitors each year.
Source: wikipedia
A Rajasthani camel driver in traditional clothing poses with his animal in the sand dunes of the Thar Desert at sunset. We don't usually associate India with deserts, but in the northwestern part of the country the Thar Desert straddles the border between India and Pakistan. By size the Thar is the 20th largest desert in the world, and the most widely populated one among deserts on the planet. About 40% of the population of the state of Rajasthan lives in the Thar.
Three Rajasthani men squatting in the desert of Pushkar, Rajasthan, India.
Rajasthani Folk Dance Medley by students of Sri Kanyaka Parameswari Arts&Science College for Women, Chennai. on 13.01.2019 in Mylapore Festival night. The students performed with ease and elegance and brought before the Chennai audience the traditional Rajasthan folk dance in style.
Portrait of a Rajasthani Man riding a camel to the Pushkar Mela in 2023. Taken with the Canon 5D4 and the Sigma 135mm Art Lens.