Traditional
cloth
Clothing in India varies from:
region to region depending
on the ethnicity, geography, climate and cultural traditions of the people of
that region
Community
•The Chhipa
community has been hand block printing for about 350 years,
•The Bagru Chhipa
community migrated from
Jaipur and settled in the Bagru area near the Sanjaria
River because it provided the necessary water for printing and chhikni mitti, an
important ingredient in Dabu mud.
bagru
• Bagru, a
small village town in Rajasthan is situated at a
distance of 32ksm east of Jaipur.
• It is
known
for its traditional processed of hand block printing of textile
cloth
•soft
and extraordinary cloth were selective
cotton as the raw material to
enhance the quality of our product.
•Apart
from this they experiment with other kinds of fabric also.
motives
•The
designs are based on traditional patterns of our novel culture.
•Bagru
prints are characterized by circular designs, as well as linear and floral
patterns.
colour
•Bagru
prints are done with natural colours.
•Bagru prints,
the colors are picked carefully. Each has a separate significance.
• For
instance, red is
the color of love, yellow of spring, indigo of
Lord Krishna, and saffron of the yogi (seer)
blocks
•The
wooden blocks that are used are made of teak wood.
Process
•Scouring-The
fabric that comes from mills of handloom sector
• Tannin- locally called ‘Peela
Karana’ ‘Harda’Washed
fabric is treated with myrobalan (harda)
which contains tannic acid.
•Printing
(mordanting)-
locally called ‘chapai’
•Ageing-locally
called ‘Sukhai’
•Washing-
locally called ‘Dhulai’
•Dyeing
(fixing of color) - locally called ‘Ghan Rangai’
Sun-bleaching- locally called ‘Tapai’
Changes
Sun-bleaching- locally called ‘Tapai’
Changes
•The
traditional ‘motifs’ of Bagru have
however under gone change over the years. The entire population of ‘chhipas’
which were earlier
engaged in
production of all local varieties of printed fabrics mostly of ‘fadats,indigo
fabric’, ‘angochha’
(small towel), ‘bichhauni’
(bed spread), rajai
(quilt) are now engaged in production of sophisticated ‘ kaftans’ ‘wraparounds’
(skirts), ‘midis’ etc.
•Natural
dyes have now been largely replaced by chemical dyes.
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