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Indian Textiles




🎪 Chapter 07 · Topic 03 · Folk Arts

Indian Textiles

Banarasi silk, Kanjeevaram, Pochampally ikat, Chanderi, Maheshwari, Paithani, Baluchari — India’s celebrated textile traditions — complete UPSC & PSC notes.

🧵 Major Indian Textile Traditions

TextileStateKey FeaturesGI Tag
Banarasi SilkUttar Pradesh (Varanasi)Zari (gold/silver thread) work; brocade weaving; Mughal floral motifs; heavy, lustrous; used for bridal wearYes (2009)
Kanjeevaram (Kanchipuram) SilkTamil NaduPure mulberry silk; heavy; contrasting border and body; temple motifs; checks; used for weddingsYes
Pochampally IkatTelanganaIkat weaving (tie-dye before weaving); geometric patterns; double ikat; GI taggedYes
ChanderiMadhya PradeshLightweight; sheer; silk-cotton blend; gold/silver zari; traditional motifs (coins, flowers)Yes
MaheshwariMadhya Pradesh (Maheshwar)Silk-cotton blend; reversible border; distinctive stripes; Ahilya Bai Holkar patronageYes
PaithaniMaharashtra (Aurangabad)Pure silk; tapestry weave; peacock and lotus motifs; oblique square border; very expensiveYes
BaluchariWest Bengal (Bishnupur)Silk; narrative scenes from Ramayana/Mahabharata woven in pallu; Malla dynasty originYes
PatolaGujarat (Patan)Double ikat silk; geometric patterns; extremely labour-intensive; Salvi communityYes
Muga SilkAssamGolden-coloured natural silk; produced only in Assam; GI tagged; used for mekhela chadorYes
PashminaJammu & KashmirFine cashmere wool from Changthangi goat; extremely soft; Shahtoosh (banned) vs PashminaYes
⭐ Pochampally Ikat: Pochampally village in Yadadri Bhuvanagiri district, Telangana is famous for its ikat weaving. Ikat is a technique where threads are tie-dyed before weaving, creating blurred, geometric patterns. Pochampally produces both single ikat (warp or weft dyed) and double ikat (both warp and weft dyed). Double ikat is extremely rare and labour-intensive — only three places in the world produce it: Pochampally (India), Patan (India), and Tenganan (Bali, Indonesia). Pochampally ikat received a GI tag.
📌 Ikat Weaving Traditions in India: India has several ikat traditions: Pochampally (Telangana) — geometric double ikat; Patola (Patan, Gujarat) — double ikat silk, extremely expensive; Sambalpuri (Odisha) — single ikat with traditional motifs (shankha, chakra, phula); Telia Rumal (AP/Telangana) — oil-treated ikat; Khandua (Odisha) — used as offering to Lord Jagannath. All are GI-tagged.

✅ Revision Checklist — Indian Textiles

✅ Banarasi silk = Varanasi, UP = zari brocade = Mughal motifs = GI 2009
✅ Kanjeevaram = Tamil Nadu = pure mulberry silk = temple motifs = GI tagged
✅ Pochampally ikat = Telangana = double ikat = geometric = GI tagged
✅ Chanderi = MP = lightweight sheer = silk-cotton = zari = GI tagged
✅ Maheshwari = MP = silk-cotton = reversible border = Ahilya Bai Holkar
✅ Paithani = Maharashtra = pure silk = peacock motifs = tapestry weave
✅ Baluchari = West Bengal (Bishnupur) = narrative scenes in pallu = GI tagged
✅ Patola = Gujarat (Patan) = double ikat silk = Salvi community = GI tagged
✅ Muga silk = Assam = golden colour = GI tagged = mekhela chador
✅ Pashmina = J&K = Changthangi goat = fine cashmere = GI tagged