Bhaiya Text
Bhaiya Text
Bhaiya Text
The actual lenght and width of sari varies by region and by quality
a
good sari made of expensive fabric, like a dense silk or fine cotton
muslin, will often be both border and longer than one that is less
costly; the less expensive mill-made sari worn by peasent and the
urban poor are noticably short in lenght and width. Many
traditional heavy cotton saris worn by tribal, peasent and low-caste
working women have always been short in order to facilate
movement, but among middle-class and weltheir women saris
expected to sweep the floor because exposed ankles are of
belonging to the laboring poor.
The end peice is the part of the sari that is draped over the sholder
and left to hang over over the back to front. The degree of
embellishmentt tradionally depends on how this is draped, as well
as for what occasion it is used, because expensive saris tend to
have
larger and elaborate end peice then less costly, everyday ones.
THE NIVI STYLE-: The nivi style of drping the sari is now so
common among the urban middle-class Indian Women that meny
foreigners do not realize that there are other ways of wearing it-
whereas ther are literally dozens. Different regional, ethnic and
tribal communites all have their own sari style and draping style
and these can be divide into six major types. Today most sari was
tied in places with a string(sometimes to a petticoat), but in the
past, the upper broder of the first 90 cm(3feet) of the sari was
usually knotted firmly round the waist, and the pleats and folds of
colth that formed the skirt (or trousers) would have been tucked
into that.
No one knows when or where block printing orignated, but the late
fifth-century murals at ajanta showing textiles containing small
repet motify suggest that such work was already being carried out.
it was certainly in existence by the eleventh century because
printing Indian textile fragaments have been excavted from the
rubbish dumps of the maldivial Egyptian port of al-fustat.
block printing saris have been created throughout India over
the past few centuries but the western region has remained the
primary area of production. ntil the early 1960s in remote and
conservative areas in rajasthan and madhya pradesh various rural
and ethnic groups still wore saris printed in specfic color and
design typical of their communities but now this tradition all most
compleately lost as most women wear lower priced mill printed
textilesand only samples found in anthropological museum
collection indicate the old divercity. unlike other traditional textile
block printed saris have been almost compleately wiped out by the
mill print sar industry and the few traditional saris and odhanis that
are still being made are usually created to "standard dimention(5.5
meter or 18 foot,saris and 2 meter or 6foot duppatas ) so that they
will sell throughout India.
today saris makeup only a small percentage of Indias block
printed textile industry and most of the major block print centers
created many other kind of fabrics including yardage for tailored
apperal and home furnishing.The two largest concentrations of
block printing activity center around
sanganer/bagru/jaipur(rajasthan ) and
farukbad/fathepur/allahabad(utttar oradesh) with smaller industries
in barmar,pali and kota(rajsthan) and Ahemdabad(gujrat) as well
as New delhi, haryana , shrinagar and jammu(Jammu and
kashmir).
BANDHANIS SARI'S
PATOLA SARI's
The most time consuming and elaborate sari created in the western
region is patola(prural;patola), which has intricate five color
designs resist-dyed into both warpand weft threads before
weaving, resulting in a compleately reversiable fablic. although
they are now created in onlyt two famalies in patan(gujrat),patola
are believed to have been made since at least the thirteenth century
and have always had aristocratic ritulistic associations. the walls of
some south indian temples, such as mattancheri(Kerala) and or
padma (lotus flower).red and black is the most common color
combination, as in the finely made khatriya odhnis,, but other pairs
of color are found .For instance, the panetar sari is a gujrati.
the bright red yellow pomcha piliya is a
traditionally odhani worn by Rajasthani and Haryana groups such
as the jat, and the red and yellow medallion saris have also existed
science atleast the ninteenth century. saris and odhanis with a
single ground color and multicoloured die spots are common
among certain ethic gropus. single color saris and odhanis with
white spots are common. The most famous is a gujrati sari called
gharchola. it is usually red but occasionally green,divided into a
netwok of squares created by rows of white tie-dyed spot or woven
bands of zari. In rajasthan , a type of bandhani created by tying
entire length of cloth rather than tiny section produces diagonal
strips of bright color called lahariya(waves). these saris were
traditionally given as gift during the festival of holi and teej.
EMBROIDERED SARI
THE ILAKA
SARIS
Asari with designs combining elements of the deccan sari and the
Tamil kornad is common in northern karnatak
(Dharwar,Bijapur,andBelgaum districts)and southern Maharasthra
(Sholapur).known by a variety of names.,it is generally called an
ilakal sari today, after a village in dharwar district. It is worn
throughout much of southern and western as well as northern
Karnataka.Its field is usually dark (blue,purple,and green) and
plain,although the Maharashtra version may contain a fine
check.Both borders and end piece are bright red with
supplementary warp bands ( kambi) in white, commonly in
herringbone,saw tooth and phool design.The end piece contains
two large white supplementry weft reku, here called teni, woven in
the interlocked weft technique.
Many ilkal saris are also embroidery with a form of runing stitch
work called kasuti (embroidery) the stiches created straight and
zigzag lines as wellas angillar often snowflake like floral
geomatric and represtationnal forms, including elephants and
stitch,gavanti for a double running stitch creating an unbroken line
and murgi for a zigzag line. There are sevral types of sdari similar
to the ilkal in other part of the westertn deccan that were traditional
associated with highewr caste and wealthier woman and in
maharashtra many of these sari were called lugade to differentiate
them from ordinary sari.One sari of this type is now becoming
increasing ly popular among lower caste maharashtra .it has asilk
( now often systhetic)warp with a cotton weft and a cheaked or
doop chhaon field.in southern maharashtra today,the end piece
warps are tie dyed red and the white tenti of the ilkal sari are
woven in,but elsewhere the ends piece matchess the colors of the
fields (such as adarker shade of olivegreen with olive green
field)unlike the ilkal sari, the borders are almost always the same
color as the field,being distinguished by a wide band of
supplementary warp[ threads usually woven in a mat weave design
in addition to stripes of herrinbone and small saw tooth patterns.
GUJRATI BRICADE
Silk saris are woven in regions of weft bengali away from the
delta in the northern (Murshidabad ) and south western districts
(burdawan,bogra,bankura and midnapur) .sari with white undyed
field and colored borders are common being know as gorad or puja
saris the letter because of the ritual associations. the wedding robes
described in many medieval sanskriti documents reflect this
aesthetic and until recently red borderd white silk sari were often
worn by high cast bengali women during marrige such saris were
also traditional worn on important ceremonial and religius
occasions such as the goddes Durgapuja held during the tumnal
Navaratri (nine night) festival, which culminates in a city state of
the goddes Durga being immersed in the Ganga on the teth day.In
some Bengali towns the statue is draped in this sari and the past
local raja would be ritually draped in it during a pivotal part of the
festival.
JAMDANI SARIS
The most expesive and exclusive dacca muslins were those that
had a distinctive supplementry weft work woven into the fabric.It
is unclear when these muslins (called jamdani) first appeared ,
because although the name jamdani is believed to be of persian
origin many hindi and other north indian language textile terms
(such as resham for silk and zari for gold warped thread) had
become personalized after the islamic invasions, and this may be
no expiation.The jamdani weaving methods does not require the
use of the persian derived draw loom. Insted it employs two
weavers sitting side by side at a simple handloom who add every
discontinuouns supplemetry weft motif separately by hand, using
individual spools of threads called tlis.
Watt 's catalogue gives the prices of a few of these sari's and
tellingly ,the least expensive neelambari jamdani at Rs ,40,
regarded by him as cheap reveals that the coarser version were
expesive textiles. But just as the very five varieties are no longer
woven so have some of the coarser types disappeared.
Most of Indian tasar silk comes from Bihar .Bihar produces about
66 % of India tasar silk and 33% off all India wild silk, although
much of it is woven in west Bengali and orgis . tasar silk is
produced in the hillls of the sourtern and eastern districts of
hazaribags, Ranchi ,singhbhaum, palaum,begusari,mugger,santhal
pargan and Bhagalpur ,with the greatest volumes in singhbhum and
santhal pargans.The east Bihar town of Bhagalpur is famous for
tasar silk mills,and although nobody knows when this industry
began, it was thriving when the first European merchants arrived in
the sixteenth century .Inabout 1800,francis Buchanan,at once time
a british government official, sureyed local textiles for east India
company and listed five types of tasar silk fabric woven there ;
They were all tasar cotton mixes usually with a tasar warp and
mixed tasar cotton weft and four types were exported out of states.
KHADI SARI'S
About 57% of all the people empolyed in the khadi industry live in
eastern India. with Utter pradesh alone accounting for 39% khadi
which is a popular abbreviation of khaddar, is the handspun,hand
woven cloth that became the enduring symbol of the Indian
Indepedence movement in the 1920s ( the Indian flag depicts the
charkha spinning wheel).It evolved out of the Swadeshi movement
of the late nineteenth century, which emphasized the use of
indigenuous rather than imported products,in particular cotton
cloth, as a means of regaining political and economic autonomy
from the British Gandhi pushed the idea further by including hand
spining something that had all but disappeared in India by the
mind-1820s,in order to give employment to poor women as well as
to make a political statement.
GADWAL SARI'S
Gadwalsari's strong links to the kornad sari's of south India and the
ilk border cotton field sari's os the eastern central Deccan .they
woven in the interlock -weft tecnique (called kupadam tippadamu
here) , often with kumbham (also called kotakomman ) in the field
was often of unbleached cotton although it may have also
contained colors such as canary yellow and ime green. gadwall
sari's also exited usually as reku..they are often regarded as puja
sari's by local women who were them for religious and festive
occasions.
PARSI SARI'S
The paris saris origanally came from persia, being Zoroastrian who
fled from Muslim persecution and forced conversion during the
earlyeigth century. for the next thousand years they lived in gujrat,
adopting the local cloths and language but maintaning their
seperate religious and ethnic identity. It wasnt until the arrival of
the British and the groth of the Gujratis port and then bombay in
eightneeth century that are social states changed.BOat builders and
trades by profesion , they deceloped good relation with the British
who used their services, many paris famails amassed huge fortunes
in the nineteenth century.
Although they never lost thier etnic identity the paris began
to emulate British manners during colonail rule . through the
nineteeth c enturies paris women continued wearing saris draped
the Gujrati style but instead of the traditional bright reds and
yellows of gujrati textiles , they cahnged to sober balcks and
whites origanally , the paris wedding sari was of the usualred
gujrati type but this bacame a white sari made of ethier borderie
anglais or lace from onne of the christian convente=s in goa and
other areas. Aothough boderi anglais is usually cotton with
embroidered floral motifs and buutonhole stiching, giving a lace-
like effect, the parsi versaion were worn on special occasions, and
a red silk with white chines embrodred with silk from chaina were
also worn spcial occasaion, and a red silk with white chines
embrodery was often worn by bride during wedding festive,,
altohough not during the actual ceremony itself . when Indian
upper-class fashoin changed in the early twenthieth century,
wealthy paris ladies adopted embroidered chiffon saris in place the
of tradition heavier fabric.
TRIBAL SARI