Inside Some of the Most Beautiful and Magical Interiors in India Inline
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson1/10A block-printed blind by Brigitte Singh at one of the Jal Mahal pavilions in Jaipur.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson2/10The reception room at the Raj Niwas Palace at Dholpur in Rajasthan was apparently constructed to welcome Prince Albert Edward, the future King Edward VII, in 1876.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson3/10A dressing room in the Palace, which has been converted into a hotel, features English tiles.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson4/10A sitting room within one of the bedrooms has a ceiling made out of pressed tin.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson5/10Tiled lemon trees line the walls in the Palace’s grand reception room.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson6/10The recently restored Hutheesing Haveli in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson7/10A guest bedroom in the Udai Bilas Palace at Dungarpur in Rajasthan has both Edwardian and contemporary wallpapers.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson8/10Another bedroom in the Palace, with wallpaper designed by Wilson and printed by Osborne & Little of London.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson9/10The floral-filled Bar Palladio in the Narain Niwas Palace hotel was painted by Vikas Soni.
Photo: Courtesy of Thames & Hudson; © 2016 Henry Wilson10/10Teak furniture with depictions of flowers at the Hutheesing Haveli.