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Tata Tea Gold paints Pujo golden with 10 art-led festive packs in Bengal

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MUMBAI: If Bengal’s Durga Puja is a painting in motion, then Tata Tea Gold has just framed it in gold. This festive season, the brand has launched a dazzling campaign Banglar Shilpi Shojjito Pujo featuring 10 limited-edition tea packs designed by celebrated Bengali artists, each capturing a different ritual of the five-day celebration.

The packs are more than packaging, they are canvases. From the thunder of the dhaak on Shashti to the swirling smoke of the dhunuchi dance on Nabami and the sindoor-smeared joy of Dashami, every pack is a stroke of nostalgia. Artists like Goutam Sarkar (acrylic realism), Gopal Naskar (myth-meets-modern pastels), Gourab Kundu (fluid watercolours), Anjan Bhattacharya (rich oils), and Joyeeta Bose (digital magic) have each lent their craft, creating a collectible series that doubles as an ode to Bengal’s artistic soul.

The campaign extends beyond shelves. A special festive TVC opens with a steaming cup of Tata Tea Gold in a Bengali household before the vapour spirals into colours that paint vibrant pandals, neighbourhoods, and rituals across West Bengal. Every transition becomes art itself with the film ending on the evocative line: “Banglar Pujo Ek Sonar Chhobir Mawto” (Bengal’s Pujo is nothing short of a golden painting).

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“Durga Puja is not just a festival; it is an emotion that binds Bengal,” said Tata Consumer Products president for packaged beverages India & South Asia Puneet Das. “This year, by collaborating with local artists, we’ve brought those emotions alive on every pack, making Pujo feel as personal as it is collective.”

The initiative builds on Tata Consumer Products’ vast consumer base of 275 million Indian households and its wide portfolio from Tata Tea and Tetley to Tata Salt, Sampann, Soulfull and Ching’s Secret. With a consolidated turnover of Rs. 17,618 crore, the company is betting on art and authenticity to deepen its festive connect.

This Durga Puja, tea breaks in Bengal may just feel like gallery visits, cups steeped not only in flavour but also in festival, memory, and art.

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Digital

India leads global adoption of ChatGPT Images 2.0 in first week

From anime avatars to fantasy covers, users turn AI visuals into culture

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NEW DELHI: India has emerged as the largest user base for ChatGPT Images 2.0, just a week after its launch by OpenAI, underlining the country’s growing influence on global internet trends.

While the tool was introduced as an advanced image-generation upgrade within ChatGPT, Indian users are quickly reshaping its purpose. Instead of sticking to productivity-led use cases, many are embracing it as a creative playground for self-expression, storytelling and online identity.

From anime-style portraits and cinematic headshots to tarot-inspired visuals and fictional newspaper front pages, the model is being used to create highly stylised, shareable content. Features such as accurate text rendering, multilingual prompts and the ability to generate detailed visuals with minimal input have helped drive rapid adoption.

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What sets the latest model apart is its ability to “think” through prompts, generating multiple outputs and adapting to context, including real-time web inputs. But the bigger story lies in how users are engaging with it.

In India, trends are already taking shape. Popular formats include dramatic studio-style lighting edits, LinkedIn-ready headshots, manga-inspired avatars, soft pastel “spring” aesthetics, AI-led fashion moodboards, paparazzi-style visuals and fantasy newspaper covers. Users are also restoring old photographs, creating tarot-style imagery and experimenting with futuristic design concepts.

Local flavour is adding another layer. Prompts such as cinematic portrait collages and Y2K-inspired romantic edits are gaining traction, blending global aesthetics with distinctly Indian internet culture.

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The surge reflects a broader shift in how AI tools are being used in the country, moving beyond utility to creativity. As younger users, creators and social media enthusiasts experiment with new visual formats, AI-generated imagery is increasingly becoming part of everyday digital expression.

If early trends hold, ChatGPT Images 2.0 may not just be a tech upgrade but a cultural moment, giving millions a new visual language to play with online.

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