Mitesh | Home & Design
Instagram Profile
Mitesh Home Design’s Instagram is projected to grow by - / day
Projection based on recent performance trends.Followers Graph

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Mitesh Home Design — Instagram Follower Projections
Projected growth from past data. Actuals may vary with trends or algorithm shifts.
Time Until | Date | Followers | Posts | Growth |
---|---|---|---|---|
Live | 208,574 | 690 | — | |
Not enough data. |

Mitesh Home Design has an Instagram engagement rate of 0.34%
Mitesh Home Design Historical Stats
Latest 15 entries. Daily follower gains and drops.

Mitesh Home Design can charge up to $20 USD per Instagram post.
Typical range: $10 – $20 USDMitesh Home Design’s Influence Rate
Export CSVMitesh Home Design shows an influence rate of 0.34%, suggesting a reach of ~648 per post.
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Mitesh Home Design (@desimeetsdesign) — 209K FollowersEngagement: 0.34% · Avg. Likes: 648 · Avg. Comments: 67
FAQ – Mitesh Home Design Instagram Stats
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- For this year’s Ganesh Chathurti celebrations I took inspiration from the traditional Wada style of architecture from Maharashtra. I used plenty of cardboard to create several arched panels with thick cardboard sandwiched in between to create a 3-dimensional piece. I painted everything a rich brown which resembled the dark ornate wood typical of the Wada homes. I then added a roof with “terracotta shingles” made from strips of paper. Two crepe paper banana trees (tutorial reel coming soon) and a hand painted rangoli added to the scene perfect for the arrival of Ganapati Bapa.
- In this new series I will be creating projects inspired by traditional textiles and embroideries. I will be starting off with the what is considered the king of weaves, the Patan Patola. It comes from the city of a Patan, Gujarat and is created by tying and dying individual thread to correspond to a pattern which is then woven together. It’s hallmark is that the front and reverse are an identical design which does not happen in other weaves. Each saree can take up to 6-9 months to create and currently only a few families still make them. For this project I used bamboo skewers to represent the threads which are “woven” together. I created a pattern on paper and then transferred to the skewers which were placed down and secured in a single layer. I used various colored markers to mark off the design before taking the sticks apart and coloring around each once. I then put them all back together which would represent “weaving” and taped everything down. The front and reverse are identical like a true Patan Patola. I finally framed it to display. Creating this project truly made me appreciate the precision, expertise, and artistry that goes into creating full patola sarees.
- The possibilities have been endless for these box trays from michaelsstores. This time I wanted to create a striped base and used painters tape to achieve it. For the feature of each box I wanted to create a Mughal floral motif. I found inspiration in some books I had and transferred an outlined image I drew into the center of the box. I used poscaoficial paint pens to color the motif and a black marker to outline and detail everything. I created 2 more boxes and attached them to a satin ribbon with some hot glue so I could hand them up.