All Products
This collection brings together handcrafted Indian clothing and textiles shaped by regional craft traditions. Using natural fabrics such as cotton, silk, and handloom weaves, each piece reflects skilled processes including weaving, printing, dyeing, and embroidery. The collection represents living textile traditions, balancing everyday function with cultural continuity and material knowledge.
Exploring Handcrafted Textiles and Artisan Traditions
A Panorama of Indian Craft and Material Heritage
The All collection represents a broad spectrum of India’s living textile, craft, and design traditions. Rather than a single garment type or region, it encompasses a diversity of woven fabrics, hand-embellished surfaces, and artisanal processes that have evolved across centuries. From handlooms in rural weaving communities to finely worked embroidered textiles, this category brings into view the range of materials and maker practices that make Indian craft distinct.“All” is not just a retail label — it is a reflection of the layered histories embedded in cloth, the techniques by which fibres are transformed, and the cultural circumstances in which these objects continue to be meaningful.
Understanding Fabric and Form
Natural Fibres, Regional Textiles, and Seasonal Use
A foundational aspect of the collection is its emphasis on natural fibres and regionally specific textiles. Cotton, silk, wool, and their blended variants form the basis of much of India’s traditional wardrobe. Each material carries its own experiential qualities: cotton’s breathability in tropical climates; silk’s luminosity and ceremonial presence; wool’s warmth in the mountainous north. Handwoven khadi, mulmul, tussar, and ikat are examples of textiles that reveal local raw materials, thread-preparation techniques, dye traditions, and loom structures unique to specific geographies.The ways these fabrics are cut and assembled speak to climate, function, and cultural expression — from looser draped forms suitable for everyday movement to structured silhouettes adorned for ceremonial occasions.
Craft Techniques Across the Collection
Surface Work and Decorative Practices
Many items in this category carry distinctive surface work created by hand. Embroidery techniques — such as chain stitch, mirror work, appliqué, and metallic thread work — transform simple ground fabrics into narrative surfaces. Weaving traditions like brocade, jamdani, and supplementary weft patterns embed motifs directly in cloth. Dyeing and printing traditions — including resist dyes, block printing, and hand-painted detail — reflect relationships between artisan communities and their plant, mineral, and pigment sources.Together these techniques map a constellation of craft vocabularies that resist a single geographical or stylistic label.
