The indian saree is the most ancient of all Indian attires. The magnificence of the saree stems from the fact that it looks good on women of any shape, age or race. The saree is loved by all Indian women. In recent times, even women outside India have taken to wearing sarees. The heritage of the is very old and it has a long and rich history. To know more about sarees, read on:
Description:
A typical indian saree is 6-9 yards long. It has a border and is sometimes heavily decorated. The long fabric is worn with a blouse and tucked into a petticoat. It is draped around the body to fall in graceful folds. One end of the saree always stays loose and is held at the shoulder. This is known as the pallu. A pallu can be worn in many ways. The most convenient way is to pleat the pallu and pin it to the blouse at the shoulder. For parties and fancy occasions, women often give the pallu one fold only and pin it up so that the fabric flows over the hand. The Indian saree complements the figure of any woman and the versatility with which it can be worn makes it a favorite of the ladies.
Types of indian sarees:
Each region of India is known for its distinctive weave when it comes to sarees. Different parts of the country have come up with their own specialized version of the Bridal saree. Each weave is different. Some of the well known and extraordinary sarees are mentioned below:
Kanjeevaram sarees:
The kanjeevaram is a kind of silk saree made in south India. It is heavy silk and the thread is woven into colorful patterns to enhance its looks. A kanjeevaram is characterized by its broad borders and bright texture. The patterns woven into a kanjeevaram are usually of temples, palaces or paintings preveant in southern India.
Benarasi saree:
Benarasi sarees are the most expensive of all sarees. This lightweight silk saree is a must for brides in many parts of eastern and north eastern India. Benarasi sarees are hand-woven in benaras/varanasi. Traditional benarasis have flower or temple like designs woven into them. However, nowadays benarasis have contemporary designs too. The patterns in benarasi sarees are made with fine gold or silver thread which attributes to the cost factor.
Other Sarees:
Other parts of India have their own specialities too, like the bandhani or bandheja sarees of Rajasthan and Gujrat, gadhwal silks from Andhra Pradesh and paithanis of Maharashtra. Each saree is identified by the distinctive quality of the silk used and the patterns woven into the sarees.
Buying a saree:
Nowadays sarees can be bought at stores or online too. There are numerous special saree stores which cater exclusively to the wearing crowd. Any of these stores will provide you with plenty of variety in colors, designs and patterns. Online stores are recent innovations and are quickly catching up on popularity. They have sarees for all occasions at very reasonable prices. An advantage of online shopping is that it can be done within the comforts of your home and your saree will be delivered right at your doorstep.
Showing posts with label Saree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saree. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Clothes and ‘modernity’
By Iftekhar Sayeed
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 9, 2009, 00:10
In a high school history book published in the United States and circulated to an extent in Bangladesh is a picture of the Japanese and Chinese negotiating terms of surrender after the first Sino-Japanese War. Part of the caption reads: “Notice the difference in clothing between the two parties: the Japanese are wearing suits while the Chinese are still wearing their traditional clothes.”
As a young lad, I was all for ‘modernity’ of the Japanese sort, the kind of modernity that degrades a human being. The spirit of ‘modernity’ has been caught powerfully in film by Bernardo Bertolucci. In ‘The Last Emperor,” we hear the emperor’s cousin, a young woman trained by the Japanese as a fighter pilot, say to the Empress: “I wish I could bomb Shanghai.” The Empress flounces out of the room: an apt repartee.
Now, a tad wiser, I am bemused by the word. What could it possibly mean? Today, the Japanese still wear the kimono, according to the Britannica, and sociologists point out the absence of civil society and a culture of obedience in the second-richest country in the world: all this makes Japan unmodern (it can’t be premodern with such superior technology, one presumes). Even the United States qualifies for nonmodernity because of the lingering belief in (God!) God. Modernity was supposed to have done with all that nonsense. What about Europe, then? Is it the sole lighthouse of modernity in a darkness of the nonmodern? Afraid not. Europe is run by unelected bureaucrats, so fails to qualify as a modern society. The word, then, has no meaning: like the unicorn or the Minotaur, we know whereof we speak, but not of what we speak.
Trousers, then, do not make for modernity. The Japanese referred to at the outset were trouser-wearing savages, as subsequent events were soon to tell. Even today, the memory of what the Japanese did to a ‘backward,’ ‘premodern’ people is seared into the victims’ collective memory. If modernity means anything today, surely it must be the loss of conscience.
I was talking to a ‘modern’ Turkish girl who felt it necessary to justify her trousers and shirt on the grounds that she was not a farm girl. Farm girls in Turkey, it seems, wear the shalwar (a loose, trouser-like garment) [1]. Curious argument, that. My mother, my wife and the farm girl in Bangladesh all wear the same garment: the saree. Yet the first two of them have never had to bend down over a single stalk of paddy with the mud between their toes. Apparently, one doesn’t have to leave village gear behind when embarking upon urban life. At my wits’ end, I asked my youngest sister-in-law, a highly qualified eye specialist, if wearing the shalwar or the saree did not make the doctors at her hospital inefficient. She was puzzled by my question and said, “We all either wear shalwar-kameez or the saree, and they have never made us inefficient!” I felt suitably stupid after that remonstrance.
“Because we share some necessities with European women. For example, I prefer to wear jeans and T-shirt, too. Because I need easily to use my legs and arms.” These were the words of my ‘modern’ Turkish interlocutor.
I see: unless you wear jeans and T-shirts, you cannot easily use your legs and arms (karate and judo teachers take note); therefore, only European women easily use their legs and arms, and those who wear jeans and T-shirt; women in Bangladesh do not easily use their legs and arms. Over 2 million female workers toil in our garments factories and they wear shalwar: so they can’t use their legs and arms, even though they are competing with garments workers from all over the world, including Europe and America. I wonder if this somehow fits into the theory of comparative advantage.
Indeed, if one forced the millions of trishaw-pullers in Bangladesh to wear pants instead of lungis, they would be positively inefficient. If the pants didn’t burst at the first push of the pedal when overcoming the inertia of rest, then it certainly would tear when controlling the inertia of motion. And one must remember that Bangladesh is poor, not because our farmers wear lungis (a sort of waist-high garment that’s held together by a knot at the belly), but because we lack good governance: 16 years of ‘modern’ democracy has had no effect on poverty. And one must remember that the green revolution was made possible not by a change in the farmer’s get-up, but by a breakthrough in rice variety.
But there’s more to the story than efficiency. When a Bangladeshi friend of ours resident in Canada was here to spend a vacation, she never wore trousers, but always the shalwar-kameez. Her sisters-in-law, who preen themselves on being ‘modern’ girls, had a good laugh over her bucolic simplicity at which the poor girl took considerable offence. Now, inefficiency does not provoke laughter: inappropriateness does. A ‘modern’ girl living in Canada has no business wearing local dresses. Even ‘modern’ girls here don’t wear them. Not because they are inefficient, but because they are not Western.
The variety of women’s clothing in Bangladesh renders this country a sort of sartorial museum. Take the lovely women in the southeastern hills. There are many tribes there, and some of them still practice slash-and-burn cultivation, which, I am told by Chakma men and women, is undertaken mostly by women. The Chakma, Marma and other women wear the thabin and angi, and the thami and blouse [2]. They tramp mile after mile of hill and jungle in these clothing. Would I want that they give up their traditional clothes and adopt the saree and shalwar-kameez, the dresses of the dominant majority? Would I want to impoverish myself by the loss of diversity that would entail? Emphatically, no.
The Westernization of clothes marks the progress to ‘modernity.’ The peer pressure among young people to don unisex clothing must be enormous. A paradigmatic shift is beginning to take place, albeit only in the realm of clothing and among the affluent. Mind you, the shalwar-kameez is just as unisex as the jeans-and-t-shirt: in Pakistan, men and women both wear the garb [3].
And the variety of the shalwar makes one giddy: today, the hottest shalwar in fashion is the ‘dhoti cut’: this is a shalwar with the leg bifurcated at the back a little to give the effect of an Indian ‘dhoti’ Equally popular is the ‘chooridar’: a shalwar with very tight legs that cling, and the garment gathers in folds at the ankles. The effect is one of subdued eroticism.
As for the saree, it can be worn in many ways. Modest women wrap it around themselves fairly closely. The more adventurous like to show a bit of flesh, and wear ‘micro-blouses’ that reward the male gazer with a generous view of their backs. Still more ‘daring’ women wear the saree below their navel, and, on a higher scale, wear sleeveless blouses and fold the garment only once about the chest with some diaphanous material that leaves little to the imagination. Indeed, the saree is an elegant outfit, and the wearer reminds one of the Greek maidens in their flowing, rippling attire.
“My usual uniform for a hot summer evening — jeans, sandals and a comfortable cotton tunic — is putting people out of business,” observes TIME journalist, Jessica Puddusery, from New Delhi, with, she admits, a little guilt. In the last two decades, the popularity of the saree has declined in India’s capital, and thousands of weavers are losing their livelihood. Imagine having to lose your livelihood because some body-covering makes a woman feel ‘modern.’ [4] “Youngsters feel like it’s more ‘oldy’ stuff,” notes an obviously young girl. “I think it’s just gradually dying out with time.”
Now the final question remains: when do we date the beginning of modernity? For it cannot be claimed that Europe was always ‘modern.’ In fact, ‘modernity’ is deliberately contrasted with what came before in Western Europe: the Dark Ages. Interestingly, the source of this ‘modernity’ was China, with its gunpowder, printing press, compass, and, above all, the horse collar. But then, as we have seen, China became unmodern!
When should we set a date for ‘modernity’? I propose the year 1492, when Columbus ‘discovered’ America and brought back some human samples as slaves to Spain, while humanely dumping the sick ones in the Atlantic as shark fodder. This, then, was the beginning of ‘modernity.’ This scandal has gone on for over five centuries, and yet the outrage is glorified by the word.
There is a feeble torch on the horizon: the rejection of ‘modernity’ by some enlightened writers. These people have exposed the enslaving ‘efficiency’ of the modern factory, the one that requires women and men to wear pants. Philosophers of science have been to the fore: they have shown that science, far from being an epitome of rationality, is the very reverse. [5]
Unfortunately, the denizens of the unmodern world are being mentally re-enslaved by those of the ‘modern.’ Now, that is surely anti-modern: but then the word has never been used with coherence.
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 9, 2009, 00:10
In a high school history book published in the United States and circulated to an extent in Bangladesh is a picture of the Japanese and Chinese negotiating terms of surrender after the first Sino-Japanese War. Part of the caption reads: “Notice the difference in clothing between the two parties: the Japanese are wearing suits while the Chinese are still wearing their traditional clothes.”
As a young lad, I was all for ‘modernity’ of the Japanese sort, the kind of modernity that degrades a human being. The spirit of ‘modernity’ has been caught powerfully in film by Bernardo Bertolucci. In ‘The Last Emperor,” we hear the emperor’s cousin, a young woman trained by the Japanese as a fighter pilot, say to the Empress: “I wish I could bomb Shanghai.” The Empress flounces out of the room: an apt repartee.
Now, a tad wiser, I am bemused by the word. What could it possibly mean? Today, the Japanese still wear the kimono, according to the Britannica, and sociologists point out the absence of civil society and a culture of obedience in the second-richest country in the world: all this makes Japan unmodern (it can’t be premodern with such superior technology, one presumes). Even the United States qualifies for nonmodernity because of the lingering belief in (God!) God. Modernity was supposed to have done with all that nonsense. What about Europe, then? Is it the sole lighthouse of modernity in a darkness of the nonmodern? Afraid not. Europe is run by unelected bureaucrats, so fails to qualify as a modern society. The word, then, has no meaning: like the unicorn or the Minotaur, we know whereof we speak, but not of what we speak.
Trousers, then, do not make for modernity. The Japanese referred to at the outset were trouser-wearing savages, as subsequent events were soon to tell. Even today, the memory of what the Japanese did to a ‘backward,’ ‘premodern’ people is seared into the victims’ collective memory. If modernity means anything today, surely it must be the loss of conscience.
I was talking to a ‘modern’ Turkish girl who felt it necessary to justify her trousers and shirt on the grounds that she was not a farm girl. Farm girls in Turkey, it seems, wear the shalwar (a loose, trouser-like garment) [1]. Curious argument, that. My mother, my wife and the farm girl in Bangladesh all wear the same garment: the saree. Yet the first two of them have never had to bend down over a single stalk of paddy with the mud between their toes. Apparently, one doesn’t have to leave village gear behind when embarking upon urban life. At my wits’ end, I asked my youngest sister-in-law, a highly qualified eye specialist, if wearing the shalwar or the saree did not make the doctors at her hospital inefficient. She was puzzled by my question and said, “We all either wear shalwar-kameez or the saree, and they have never made us inefficient!” I felt suitably stupid after that remonstrance.
“Because we share some necessities with European women. For example, I prefer to wear jeans and T-shirt, too. Because I need easily to use my legs and arms.” These were the words of my ‘modern’ Turkish interlocutor.
I see: unless you wear jeans and T-shirts, you cannot easily use your legs and arms (karate and judo teachers take note); therefore, only European women easily use their legs and arms, and those who wear jeans and T-shirt; women in Bangladesh do not easily use their legs and arms. Over 2 million female workers toil in our garments factories and they wear shalwar: so they can’t use their legs and arms, even though they are competing with garments workers from all over the world, including Europe and America. I wonder if this somehow fits into the theory of comparative advantage.
Indeed, if one forced the millions of trishaw-pullers in Bangladesh to wear pants instead of lungis, they would be positively inefficient. If the pants didn’t burst at the first push of the pedal when overcoming the inertia of rest, then it certainly would tear when controlling the inertia of motion. And one must remember that Bangladesh is poor, not because our farmers wear lungis (a sort of waist-high garment that’s held together by a knot at the belly), but because we lack good governance: 16 years of ‘modern’ democracy has had no effect on poverty. And one must remember that the green revolution was made possible not by a change in the farmer’s get-up, but by a breakthrough in rice variety.
But there’s more to the story than efficiency. When a Bangladeshi friend of ours resident in Canada was here to spend a vacation, she never wore trousers, but always the shalwar-kameez. Her sisters-in-law, who preen themselves on being ‘modern’ girls, had a good laugh over her bucolic simplicity at which the poor girl took considerable offence. Now, inefficiency does not provoke laughter: inappropriateness does. A ‘modern’ girl living in Canada has no business wearing local dresses. Even ‘modern’ girls here don’t wear them. Not because they are inefficient, but because they are not Western.
The variety of women’s clothing in Bangladesh renders this country a sort of sartorial museum. Take the lovely women in the southeastern hills. There are many tribes there, and some of them still practice slash-and-burn cultivation, which, I am told by Chakma men and women, is undertaken mostly by women. The Chakma, Marma and other women wear the thabin and angi, and the thami and blouse [2]. They tramp mile after mile of hill and jungle in these clothing. Would I want that they give up their traditional clothes and adopt the saree and shalwar-kameez, the dresses of the dominant majority? Would I want to impoverish myself by the loss of diversity that would entail? Emphatically, no.
The Westernization of clothes marks the progress to ‘modernity.’ The peer pressure among young people to don unisex clothing must be enormous. A paradigmatic shift is beginning to take place, albeit only in the realm of clothing and among the affluent. Mind you, the shalwar-kameez is just as unisex as the jeans-and-t-shirt: in Pakistan, men and women both wear the garb [3].
And the variety of the shalwar makes one giddy: today, the hottest shalwar in fashion is the ‘dhoti cut’: this is a shalwar with the leg bifurcated at the back a little to give the effect of an Indian ‘dhoti’ Equally popular is the ‘chooridar’: a shalwar with very tight legs that cling, and the garment gathers in folds at the ankles. The effect is one of subdued eroticism.
As for the saree, it can be worn in many ways. Modest women wrap it around themselves fairly closely. The more adventurous like to show a bit of flesh, and wear ‘micro-blouses’ that reward the male gazer with a generous view of their backs. Still more ‘daring’ women wear the saree below their navel, and, on a higher scale, wear sleeveless blouses and fold the garment only once about the chest with some diaphanous material that leaves little to the imagination. Indeed, the saree is an elegant outfit, and the wearer reminds one of the Greek maidens in their flowing, rippling attire.
“My usual uniform for a hot summer evening — jeans, sandals and a comfortable cotton tunic — is putting people out of business,” observes TIME journalist, Jessica Puddusery, from New Delhi, with, she admits, a little guilt. In the last two decades, the popularity of the saree has declined in India’s capital, and thousands of weavers are losing their livelihood. Imagine having to lose your livelihood because some body-covering makes a woman feel ‘modern.’ [4] “Youngsters feel like it’s more ‘oldy’ stuff,” notes an obviously young girl. “I think it’s just gradually dying out with time.”
Now the final question remains: when do we date the beginning of modernity? For it cannot be claimed that Europe was always ‘modern.’ In fact, ‘modernity’ is deliberately contrasted with what came before in Western Europe: the Dark Ages. Interestingly, the source of this ‘modernity’ was China, with its gunpowder, printing press, compass, and, above all, the horse collar. But then, as we have seen, China became unmodern!
When should we set a date for ‘modernity’? I propose the year 1492, when Columbus ‘discovered’ America and brought back some human samples as slaves to Spain, while humanely dumping the sick ones in the Atlantic as shark fodder. This, then, was the beginning of ‘modernity.’ This scandal has gone on for over five centuries, and yet the outrage is glorified by the word.
There is a feeble torch on the horizon: the rejection of ‘modernity’ by some enlightened writers. These people have exposed the enslaving ‘efficiency’ of the modern factory, the one that requires women and men to wear pants. Philosophers of science have been to the fore: they have shown that science, far from being an epitome of rationality, is the very reverse. [5]
Unfortunately, the denizens of the unmodern world are being mentally re-enslaved by those of the ‘modern.’ Now, that is surely anti-modern: but then the word has never been used with coherence.
Source: http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_4885.shtml
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