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  • Indicus Paints unveils Neotė luxury interior emulsion with Tamil heritage-inspired design

Indicus Paints unveils Neotė luxury interior emulsion with Tamil heritage-inspired design

Indicus Paints unveils Neotė luxury interior emulsion with Tamil heritage-inspired design
Homes today are no longer just spaces to live in, they are becoming expressions of identity, memory, and personal taste. Every wall, corner, and surface carries the potential to reflect who we are and where we come from.Across India, there is a quiet shift in how people think about interiors. Instead of chasing borrowed trends, many are turning inward, drawing from regional art, craft, and cultural cues to shape spaces that feel both rooted and contemporary.This evolving design sensibility is redefining modern living. It blends tradition with aspiration, where heritage is not preserved as nostalgia but reinterpreted as a living, breathing part of everyday environments.It is within this context of renewed cultural confidence and design-led storytelling that new ideas in home surfaces are beginning to take shape, where aesthetics go beyond finish and function, and start engaging with heritage in ways that feel both meaningful and modern.Indicus Paints has announced the launch of Indicus Neotė Luxury Interior Emulsion, positioning it as India’s first luxury paint brand inspired by Tamil cultural heritage.The brand said the product stands out for its packaging, which draws on the state’s artistic traditions, performing arts and cultural symbols, blending South Indian heritage with a contemporary luxury aesthetic.A canvas for cultural celebrationThe Neotė packaging captures a delicate balance between heritage and modernity. Anchored in a purple hue that exudes confidence and contemporary elegance, the design incorporates carefully selected visual elements that serve as cultural touchstones from Tamil Nadu and broader South India. Each element is rendered in traditional, vivid colours, celebrating the extensive palette that Indicus offers.The packaging features an array of iconic cultural symbols such as:Bharatanatyam, rooted in the Natya Shastra and Tamil performance traditions, is featured alongside musical instruments such as the Veena, Nadaswaram, and Mridangam, while artistic traditions like Thanjavur dolls, Kolam, and the martial art Silambattam showcase the region’s creativity and heritage. This cultural richness is further reflected in architectural landmarks, including Madurai’s Meenakshi Temple and the University of Madras..Living traditions such as community boat races and Jallikattu, the Pongal festival sport that celebrates bravery and preserves native cattle breeds, continue to sustain and reinforce Tamil cultural identity.“With Neotė, we wanted to do more than create a luxury paint. We wanted to honour the richness of Tamil Nadu’s cultural heritage. From Bharatnatyam to the Veena and Nadaswaram, these timeless arts reflect centuries of beauty and precision. Bringing them into our packaging is our way of showing that modernity doesn’t replace tradition, it reimagines it with confidence,” said Gokul Basker, Brand Founder, Indicus & Partner, VNC Group.Logo design: Where typography meets traditionThe Neotė sub-brand logo exemplifies Indicus' commitment to fresh, unseen, and melodic design principles. Drawing typographical inspiration from Tamil script itself, the logo incorporates fluid viscosity reminiscent of wet paint.
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"The logo evokes the same sensibility as Indo-Western fusion music, old and new blending into something distinct that exudes fresh and confident sophistication," explained Gautam Patil, Co-Founder and Design Head at Plus One, who was responsible for designing the logo and packaging. "These design elements seamlessly travel from Indicus’ parent brand into Neotė, and ultimately into the homes whose walls it will grace and elevate, young, contemporary, confident, yet grounded in a rich past," he added.Neotė and the new India: A design language reclaimedNeotė’s launch comes amid a broader cultural shift reshaping India’s design language, with a growing emphasis on authenticity, regional identity and inherited traditions over borrowed minimalism. The emerging ‘India Modern’ aesthetic favours layered textures such as wicker, terracotta, brass and handloom, combining sensory richness with contemporary restraint. Indic typography is also gaining prominence, with local scripts increasingly used as markers of identity, reflected in Neotė’s logo inspired by the fluidity of Tamil script. Designers, meanwhile, are moving away from a monolithic ‘Pan-Indian’ approach, drawing instead on hyper-local influences ranging from Chettinad architecture to Warli art to create more rooted and resonant design narratives.On the design language, Gautam Patil said “Designing Neotė was never about borrowing from culture as ornamentation, it was about listening to it. Tamil culture has an extraordinary sense of rhythm, restraint, and confidence whether in its scripts, its performing arts, or its architecture. As we immersed ourselves in this world, we realised that modernity already exists within these traditions; it simply needed a contemporary voice.”“The logo draws from the lyrical nature of Tamil typography and the fluidity of paint itself, while the packaging becomes a canvas where Bharatanatyam, Kolam, music, festivals, and architecture coexist against a modern, confident purple. That contrast was intentional; it mirrors how heritage and progress live side by side in Tamil Nadu. Neotė is our way of saying that luxury doesn’t have to be imported or anonymous. It can be rooted, expressive, and proudly local yet feel global, fresh, and future-facing. This project reaffirmed our belief that when you design with respect and depth, culture doesn’t age it evolves,” he added.Sustainability, too, is being reframed as an intrinsic part of Indian tradition rather than a Western import. Practices rooted in circularity, biodegradability and natural materials, seen in everything from banana-leaf dining to organic dyeing, highlight the country’s long-standing ecological sensibilities. Neotė positions itself at this intersection of heritage and innovation, where premium quality aligns with regional identity and modern performance draws on traditional aesthetics.Neotė embodies the Indicus vision“The launch of Neotė represents the fullest expression of Indicus's commitment to cultural revitalization and artistic innovation,” said Gokul Basker. Through its Crossections initiative, Indicus is establishing itself as a bridge between tradition and modernity, a philosophy that comes alive in every element of the brand’s design. By incorporating motifs such as Bharatanatyam, the Veena, Kolam art and architectural landmarks like the Meenakshi Temple into its packaging, Indicus seeks to reinterpret heritage for contemporary audiences. With Neotė, the brand positions the celebration of South Indian artistic traditions alongside advanced paint technology as complementary, underscoring its focus on cultural authenticity as a key differentiator.Premium performance meets timeless eleganceBeyond its distinctive packaging, Neotė Luxury Interior Emulsion offers a silky-sheen finish and a scuff-resistant formulation designed to guard against marks, scratches and everyday wear.. The product also incorporates Silver Ion Technology, which uses the antimicrobial properties of silver to help inhibit bacterial growth on painted surfaces. The paint also features a velvet-touch finish designed to deliver a smooth, premium texture, along with enhanced washability enabled by stain-resistant polymers for durability under repeated cleaning. It is backed by an eight-year warranty covering film integrity, flaking and peeling, the brand said, positioning the product as a long-lasting interior solution.Disclaimer: This article has been produced on behalf of Indicus by Times Internet’s Spotlight team.
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