Kani Shawl

A Kani shawl is a type of Kashmir shawl originating from the Kanihama area of Kashmir.[1] It is one of the oldest handicraft of Kashmir. This craft has been a part of the valley since the time of Mughals. The shawls are woven from pashmina yarn.[2] The government of Jammu and Kashmir has granted a geographical indication to the Kani shawl, making it illegal to sell shawls made outside of the Kanihama area as Kani shawls.[1]

History

Kani weaving is believed to be an art indigenous to Kanihama and traced back to 3000 BC.[3] This exquisite shawl was once coveted by Mughal Kings, Sikh Maharajas and British Aristocrats. The Ain-i-Akbari records that Emperor Akbar was an avid collector of Kani shawls.

While the name 'Kani' comes from the area where this particular artisans come from, Kanihama, the word 'Kani' - in Kashmiri - also means a small wooden oblong spool.

How is Kani Shawl Made

Kani shawl is made from pashmina on a handloom. But instead of a shuttle used in regular pashmina shawls, Kani shawls use needles made from cane[4] or wood.[5] The distinguishable, Mughal patterns, usually of flowers and leaves, are woven into the fabric like a carpet, thread by thread, based on the coded pattern called 'Talim'. The talim guides the weaver in number of warp threads to be covered in a particular colored-weft.

Families who are in weaving Kani Shawls usually work patiently, working between 5 and 7 hours a day, in between attending to their household chores. Depending on the intricacy and complexity of the design being woven, an artisan can weave a maximum of one inch per day. Depending on the design, size and detailing, a Kani Shawl may take anything between 6 and 18 months to be completed.

Only the trained craftsmen are knowledgeable enough to weave Kani Shawls the right way. The techniques and knowledge have been transferring from forefathers to next generations. It is estimated that from the 10,000-odd kani weavers, only 2,000 are left today.[6]

Symbol of Luxury

The intricacy of the workmanship and the amount of labor that it takes to create a single Kani jamawar pashmina shawl is more than any other handloom product. This is why they usually are more costlier than any other pashmina shawl in the market.

In recent times, the Talim patterns are used in machine-woven shawls which are Kani-shawls look-alikes, and are sold commercially across Kashmir and other parts of India and beyond. A machine-woven copy of a Kani shawl can cost from INR 4,000, one-twentieth of the price of an original hand-woven one.

Kani Shawls are housed in world's finest museums like Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris and the department of Islamic art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

See also

Kashmiri handicrafts

References

  1. "Kashmir's famous Kani shawls get GI status". The Hindu. 22 March 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  2. Vasudev, Shefalee (21 July 2015). "Looms of the valley". Mint. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  3. Beigh, Aamir (2018-05-15). "Process Of Making A Kani Shawl | Pure Kashmir". Medium. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
  4. "Kani Pashmina Shawls". purekashmir.com. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
  5. Pashmina.com (2018-05-28). "What is a Kani Shawl & Kani Pashmina Shawl Price & How it is made?". Pashmina Editorial. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
  6. Vasudev, Shefalee (2014-04-12). "The other side of pashmina". Mint. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
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