Exploring the Beauty of Nepali Puti: A Cultural Icon
| Feature | Added Value | |--------|-------------| | (e.g., remove temple backdrop) | Enables “sticker‑style” sharing. | | Geotag auto‑fill using device GPS + reverse‑geocode to Nepali place names | Auto‑tags “Pashupatinath Temple”. | | QR‑code for offline sharing (generate a QR that encodes the image data) | Useful in festivals where mobile data is scarce. | | Batch watermark (“© YourAppName | 2026”) | Protects creator rights. | | Server‑side duplicate detection (hash‑based) | Prevents accidental double‑uploads of the same ritual photo. |
Here are some stunning photos of Nepali Puti:
After the fall of the Rana regime in 1951, Nepal opened its markets and saw a boom in small‑scale entrepreneurship. The portable, cheap, and quickly prepared Puti became a favorite of schoolchildren, laborers, and travelers. By the 1970s, “Puti stalls” were a common sight in every major town square.
