Desi Wool from KUTCH

Rabaris are a pastoral community who live in many parts of Kutch. They have large herds, mostly of sheep and some goats, for milk, meat and wool. The pastoral land is shrinking and their pastoralist’s life is changing. From a nomadic existence, many today live a more settled life. Due to financial compulsions, the women go out to work as farm labourers or daily wagers. There was a time when Rabari women were known for their exquisite, colourful embroideries, sprinkled with mirrors. Apart from their clothing they created embroideries to decorate their homes as well as their animals. They also spun wool for their own clothing and the dhabla (shawls) used by their men. Now, there is little leisure time for embroidery and most opt to buy fabrics from the market and get them embellished with machine embroidery and rickrack lace, by the local tailor. Their lifestyle has changed and so has their clothing. The Rabari women no longer wear the black woollen garments, which they had worn for generations.
 
 
Their sheep need to be sheared twice every year, once in early February and then in mid-July. Till recently, the Lavas, a Muslim community from Barmer, would come to shear the sheep, and the pastoralists gave them some wool in exchange for their labour. Earlier, there was a demand for this local wool. The market today is flooded with imported Australian merino wool and the demand for desi wool has decreased. So the shearers from Barmer, who sheered the wool and took most of this back to the Badmer mandi have stopped coming. This has created a huge problem as the pastoralists now have to pay to get the sheep sheared, something they cannot afford. Also, they have to find a way to dispose of the mountains of fleece, as burning it is not an option.
 
 
 

In 2016, Khamir, an NGO working with artisans in Kutch, took up the challenge of reviving the use of desi wool by inviting designers to create collections using the local wool for a bazaar at the Living Lightly exhibition that was to be held in Delhi. This was an opportunity to get direct customer feedback for the locally made products in desi wool and local leather as well as to test the marketability of these goods. Encouraged by the positive response and interest shown at the bazaar, Khamir has now started working towards reviving the entire chain from sourcing the wool to spinning the yarn and making cloth and clothing using desi wool for urban markets. Women are willing to spin and weavers willing to weave if there are sustained orders.
 
Wool is a versatile, hydrophobic fibre that can be used for insulating or sound proofing spaces. In Europe, experiments have been done to use the fibre as a filler material to make environmentally friendly unbaked bricks which could be stronger, and have better sound and heat insulation. This biodegradable, healthy alternative to conventional building materials would create value out of waste, as the coarse wool is not ideally suited for fashion clothing.
view: 0 Categories: Gujarat By: Varsha Modi

About the Author

Archana Shah

Archana Shah

Archana Shah graduated from the National Institute of Design (NID) in 1980. Soon after graduating from NID, she travelled to remote corners of the country to study, understand and experience the vast variety of weaving, dyeing, printing, embroidery and ornamentation techniques practised by different communities.

This proved to be a very enriching journey, and the unique skills of the people of various regions, their distinctive colour palettes, and rich design vocabulary became the base for all her future work.

In 1985, Archana started a clothing company, BANDHEJ, a label influenced by the traditional textiles and craft skills, created for Indian women, with a very Indian sensibility. Today, Bandhej is a recognised brand, with a chain of stores in Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi, Kolkata, Pune and Cochin.

Apart from this, she has designed costumes for a few feature films such as Bhavni Bhavai, Mirch Masala, Hun, Hunshi, Hunsilal and costumes for theatre. 1985 – 1997 she also worked on Festival of India inaugurations at Paris, Moscow, Leningrad and Tashkent to design architectural textile installations to create an Indian mood.

More recently she has published a book - SHIFTING SANDS, Kutch: A Land in Transition. The book is a personal journey of discovery and about her association of over 30 years with the land, people and their craft.

view: 0 Categories: Gujarat By: Varsha Modi

About the Author

Archana Shah

Archana Shah

Archana Shah graduated from the National Institute of Design (NID) in 1980. Soon after graduating from NID, she travelled to remote corners of the country to study, understand and experience the vast variety of weaving, dyeing, printing, embroidery and ornamentation techniques practised by different communities.

This proved to be a very enriching journey, and the unique skills of the people of various regions, their distinctive colour palettes, and rich design vocabulary became the base for all her future work.

In 1985, Archana started a clothing company, BANDHEJ, a label influenced by the traditional textiles and craft skills, created for Indian women, with a very Indian sensibility. Today, Bandhej is a recognised brand, with a chain of stores in Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi, Kolkata, Pune and Cochin.

Apart from this, she has designed costumes for a few feature films such as Bhavni Bhavai, Mirch Masala, Hun, Hunshi, Hunsilal and costumes for theatre. 1985 – 1997 she also worked on Festival of India inaugurations at Paris, Moscow, Leningrad and Tashkent to design architectural textile installations to create an Indian mood.

More recently she has published a book - SHIFTING SANDS, Kutch: A Land in Transition. The book is a personal journey of discovery and about her association of over 30 years with the land, people and their craft.