10.12.2019 Views

Handmade in India

Handmade in India represents the sum of the special knowledge from India's united family and it captures vividly the intellectual property which has created wealth for generations and which will continue creating it and multiplying it in the times to come.

Handmade in India represents the sum of the special knowledge from India's united family and it captures vividly the intellectual property which has created wealth for generations and which will continue creating it and multiplying it in the times to come.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

TERRACOTTA AND POTTERY

THE FEW REMAINING potters in Vaghchhipa have been

practising for more than three generations since the time it was a

flourishing centre for pottery.Apart from the utilitarian products

and votive offering,the terracotta repertoire also consists of figures

of deities for ceremonial and auspicious occasions.The

ghumat,dome-shaped shrine with an opening to hold a lamp,is

offered to the departed person whose spirit is invited to reside in

it.A wheel-thrown water pot is transformed into a shrine by

Tools

Panko-stone

Tipni-beating tool

Bhatti-furnace

Tachka or Areetha -

polish

Fishing net,Cloth

string

Kaplu-metal piece

adding a border,horse figures and a form resembling the

auspicious offering of kalash,pot and betel leaves.The tradition

of offering a ghumat or dhabu,shrine,is also prevalent in Chota

Udaipur in Gujarat and Jhabua in Madhya Pradesh-with regional

variations in the size and design of the shrine.

Production Clusters

Silvassa

Vaghchhipa village

Products

Matka-kodiya-small

lamps

Nani gadvi-small pot

Loti-glass

Taadi nu ghadiyaliquor

container

Ghumat,Bonbhi

Baramdev-votive

offerings

Choras bedhu-water

container

Maatlu-containers

Taadi-pot

1. A part of the

process of

making a votive

offering out a

terracotta pot in

Dadra.

2. The artisan

makes scallops

by pinching the

wet clay,which

is added to the

por by scoring

and grooving its

surface.

3. Making a pattern

of small notches

with a scraping

tool on the pot.

4. A completed

ghumat,shrine.

FISHING NETS

THE MEN AND women of the Rahekar,Warli and Kokna fishing

communities have been residing in Dudhni Village for more than

three generations and making fishing nets that require minute

detailing.The women do the preparatory work that includes

making and mending nets.The knot forming sutar string is passed

through the crown of the pendant loop in the

Fishing net.

previous row and round its two ends.The handmade fishing net

have been replaced by synthetic factory-made ones.Even in

contemporary times,monetary exchange is limited,and the barter

system is the primary economic mode among the communities

where fish is exchanged for grains.

Detail of a handmade fishing net.

Production Clusters

Silvassa

Dudhni village

Products

Fishing nets

Tools

Bamboo stick

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!