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Dupatta

Our product range contains a wide range of Phulkari Dupatta

Phulkari Dupatta

4,500 / Piece Get Latest Price
  • Min. Order (MOQ) 100 Piece
  • Packaging Type Multicolor
  • Gender Female
  • Feature Anti-Wrinkle, Impeccable Finish
  • Pattern Printed, Embroidered
  • Occasion Festive Wear
  • Country of Origin India
  • Wash Care Hand Wash

AED : 500 per piece USD : 250 per piece KWD : 150 per piece

 

We want to preserve & promote this art to young generation to use Plulkari duppta in day to day life and also to various events, festival & specially marriage, we offer best of the phulkaries in different colors & design, we offer Retails acrosse world & welcome B2B enquiry from different country.  

 

To the tune of old folk songs, a gathering of women in rural Punjab, India creatively embroider shawls, everyday clothes and gifts, sewing brightly coloured silk thread on to khaddar, a cotton-based fabric in the earthy tones of the Punjabi countryside. Young girls keenly copy their mothers’ motifs; older women embroider for future weddings. This is phulkari (phul-kari or ‘flower-craft’), a traditional Punjabi folk art, dating from the 15th to the mid-20th century, when increasing commercialisation led to its decline within rural communities, implicitly ending a practice of female bonding.

 

A young bride’s maternal grandmother would gift a chope (a phulkari identically embroidered on both sides of the cloth), which she had begun upon the child’s birth. Similarly, a boy’s grandmother would create a vari da bagh (bagh means ‘garden’, in reference to the dominant floral motifs) to present his future bride. During the wedding ceremony, the bagh is held above the bride by female relatives, who also shroud her upon arrival at her marital home, signifying kinship amongst the women.

 

Traditional baghs retained as family heirlooms are still presented as part of a trousseau, continuing the practice of phulkari as a symbol of happiness and prosperity for a married woman.1in 2011, a Geographical Indication patent was awarded for phulkari, 2 helping to preserve the heritage of this uniquely Punjabi folk art.

 

 

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