Odia Kohinoor Calendar 1988 -

The 1988 edition was particularly special. Why? Because 1988 represented the late-Rajiv Gandhi era, a specific flavor of pre-liberalization India, and a golden period for Odia art and typography. If you ask anyone who remembers 1988, they won’t recall what day of the week December 25th fell on (it was a Sunday, by the way). Instead, they will recall the cover art .

In the age of digital reminders on our wrists and smartphones buzzing with notifications, the humble wall calendar has become an afterthought. But for those who grew up in Odisha in the 80s and 90s, the annual ritual of hanging the Kohinoor Calendar was a sacred domestic event. odia kohinoor calendar 1988

And if you happen to find a vintage copy of the , you aren’t just holding a timekeeping device. You are holding a time capsule. The King of Calendars Long before the internet, Kohinoor was a household name. Published by Kohinoor Press (and its iconic sibling, the Basumati calendar), this wasn’t just a grid of numbers. For Odia families, bringing home the Kohinoor calendar was as essential as the Ratha Jatra festival. The 1988 edition was particularly special

So here’s to the Kohinoor Calendar of 1988. It may have expired 36 years ago, but its memories are still valid. If you ask anyone who remembers 1988, they

odia kohinoor calendar 1988

Simon Birtles

I have been in the IT sector for over 20 years with a primary focus on solutions around networking architecture & design in Data Center and WAN. I have held two CCIEs (#20221) for over 12 years with many retired certifications with Cisco and Microsoft. I have worked in demanding and critical sectors such as finance, insurance, health care and government providing solutions for architecture, design and problem analysis. I have been coding for as long as I can remember in C/C++ and Python (for most things nowadays). Locations that I work without additional paperwork (incl. post Brexit) are the UK and the EU including Germany, Netherlands, Spain and Belgium.