Photographer Supernaw das was born in Calcutta, studied at the School of visual arts in new York. For his graduation project, he returned to his homeland, where he captured a vanishing profession and caste of India. Here, there are still these exotic craft like a street astrologer, street ear cleaner, manufacturer of manual mills and rickshaw. Especially these photos is a curious fact that Suprana reported revenue of their characters, and they're not always predictable.
Street astrologer — $ 50 a week
Rickshaw — $ 12 per week
The ear cleaner and the perfumer — $ 28 per week
Potter, $ 25 per week
Street printer — 12,5 dollars a week
Master of knife sharpening — $ 40 per week
The priests in the temple of the goddess Kali — $ 20 per week
Street vendor cans for oil — $ 21 per week
Manufacturer of manual mills — $ 50 a week
The owner of the tea stall — $ 210 per week
Drummer festivals — 25 dollars a week
Cook and caterer — $ 60 per week
Brahman — $ 20 per week
Boys hired musicians of the orchestra is 6 dollars a week
Seller baskets — $ 10 per week
Street Barber — $ 26 per week
The manufacturer/vendor of brooms — $ 20 per week
The seller of sugar cane juice — $ 24 per week
Manufacturer and seller of reed mats and baskets — $ 15 per week
Puppeteer — $ 15 per week
Flower girl for the worship of the gods — $ 30 per month
Journeyman bricklayer — 12.5 dollars a week
Butcher — $ 14 per week
Almost the same thing, only in the form of video.
Now, thanks to this series of photos, you know that one of the most profitable disappearing professions — a street astrologer (quacks no karma not decree), and more profitable in the streets of Calcutta to be the owner of a tea shop — with its 210 dollars in a week he gets almost as twenty-rickshaws or student of a bricklayer.