Textiles Journey through India

Above: Gaddi Ghar 2. (Bari Kothi)

Braided Tales: a textiles journey through India

Kantha cotton is one of the most iconic textiles of Bengal.

Kantha is an ancient tradition of crafting patchwork cloth from rags. The term “kantha” refers to both the running stitch and the finished textile.

Kantha cotton has been stitched in Bengal for time immemorial. It is believed that the Buddha and his men never wore new fabrics. They collected old fabrics from various homes and then sewed them together. The village women would use the same running stitch to create comfortable quilts for their husbands and children.

Kantha Cotton

Bengal has a rich textile heritage. Created by master artisans of ancient techniques, Bengal’s brightly patterned, intricate fabrics have a story to tell.

These are tales of zamindars, Mughal emperors and wealthy European merchants. But also, quiet tales of spinners and weavers and small-time traders, for whom these textiles mean much more than just a fabric to be worn.

Sampan Travel’s Braided Tales 14-day journey through West Bengal is an exploration into these textiles.

From left: Kathgola, Murshidabad, West Bengal, India. (Anuvab Sarkar on Unsplash). Swimming Pool with bird - Kolkata, West Bengal, India. (Abhishek Khandelwal). The Glenburn Penthouse

In recent decades, kantha has risen to much more prominence. This greater publicity for kantha has been formed against the backdrop of women’s liberation and income generation for rural households.

Shabnam Ramaswamy provides sustained work to a large number of women in the surrounding villages of her native home. Shabnam realised that every woman in the village knew how to make kantha, and if Shabnam could give their creations a contemporary twist for urban markets, she could raise incomes for all.

What began as a livelihood project for poor village women has developed into the strong label, Katna’s Kantha. Today over 1,800 women create embroidered saris, bedcovers and throws.

Jamdani Muslin & Baluchari Silk

The most famous textile to come out of Bengal is muslin.

As far back as antiquity, muslin was being exported out of Bengal. The Romans referred to it as “textile venti” or “woven winds”. Under Mughal rule, muslin was sent as tribute to Delhi. It was so fine, that once the Emperor Aurangzeb, aghast, raged at his daughter for appearing in public undressed, to which she retorted that she was in fact wearing seven layers of Dhaka muslin.

The most exquisite muslin is jamdani muslin: handwoven with intricate patterns. Made from the finest cotton threads, jamdani is known for its floral and geometric motifs.

During the Indian independence movement, muslin manufacturing in India was sidelined and preference given to khadi – the course cotton made famous by Gandhi’s “swadeshi” movement. Subsequently, the partition of Bengal into West Bengal and Bangladesh splintered supply chains.

The next most famous textile of Bengal is baluchari silk.

This silk is woven using highly twisted silk for the warp while the weft is composed of loosely twisted yarn. Baluchari silks have elaborate framed borders consisting of images depicting the sophisticated life of rulers, affluent bankers and wealthy European traders. The transition from Nawabi to Colonial rule in Bengal is beautifully captured through these textiles.

Darshan Shah, founder of Weavers Studio in Kolkata, writes: “The motifs of the Baluchar saris weave a fascinating tale of tradition and change while documenting events and the lifestyle of a bygone era.”

Braided Tales

Sampan Travel’s Braided Tales 14-day journey through West Bengal is an exploration into the textiles of Bengal.

Our journey begins in Kolkata. Here we shall meet Darshan Shah. We shall then travel up to Santiniketan and meet the dynamic and creative artisans who are sustaining and innovating these textiles, including Shabnam Ramaswamy. We travel on to Murshidabad and then turn south, winding beside the Hooghly River, to see the world’s pre-eminent muslin workshop.

Today, the artistry of Bengal is seeing a revival. These tales being spun are as much a tract for the future as they are a recollection of the past.

Sampan’s Braided Tales textiles tour of India intends to tell this story with clarity and integrity.

This journey takes place 10-23 March 2025. Booking is now open.

 

Speak to us on WhatsApp at +44 7378 149 695
or email us at hello@sampantravel.com.

 
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