Like a beautiful crystal, found naturally in an ore, Roop is the unpolished essence of change, a restoration of generational heirlooms. Like her grandmother before her, Roop is the complexity of youth woven in the same Banarsi saree, in the simplicity of its form.
Priyanka Raajiv endeavors to
intertwine the threads of this connection that transcends time and weave a
story within traditional handloom fabric. A parallel softness lies in the
narrative of restoration: it is done carefully with the expert skill of
artisans who have learned the craft from their grandparents.
The Indian fashion designer began imbibing upcycling from day 1 into the brand philosophy and gave it a signature touch. The modern woman yearns for a continuation of intuitively structured pieces while metamorphosis takes place with millennial sensibilities. Bringing about this balance of perspective in a saree or a lehenga is intricate work, taking minute details to give the antiquity an artistic finesse.
Taking a 100-year-old Paithani saree or a 30-year-old kurta that is worn out and adorning it to create eloquent pieces of urban shade is a skill that revolves around the fourth R of sustainability- repurpose. A grandmother or a mother-in-law cherishes the memories tied into the loom of each saree, each lehenga that they have doned as a kaleidoscopic shrine of their life.
To pass this on, Priyanka Raajiv consults her clients with a honed knowledge of silhouettes and fabrics, writing biographies into a restoration, like a family repository hidden in its essence. The soul of this process lies in the translation of retaining the exclusivity of a piece while using antique zardozi, sequins, and embroidery to reveal the deliberate rarity of the original fabric.
Roop has been an essential
part of Priyanka Raajiv label since it’s conception, curated with an
eco-conscious mindset, storytelling within a garment’s unrestricted flow: a
tale of transformation.
“All design practitioners can get stuck at times, but what I
value the most is the rare time that one is in the flow…oblivious to the rest
of the world, totally focused on a concept or idea.”
Hema Shroff Patel, founder of Amba experienced this soulful connection on the banks of the river Narmada. Working with the Holkars at Rehwa Society, a Maheshwari handloom charitable trust, she began her exploration into weaving at a grassroots level with a simple appreciation for the handwoven cotton fabric with small borders which she had tailored into kurta pajamas for children. She organically grew from this homegrown affair to promoting and preserving the Indian handloom industry.
When asked about the current sustainability buzz, her words reflected her empathy towards Indian artisanal crafts. As a designer, sustainability is an inquiry into oneself, and the ideology goes deeper than a superficial trend. This, for Amba, begins at home: in the profit-sharing scheme, they seek an organic business model, upskilling the artisans and giving a touch of humanistic structure to the entire hierarchy.
Weavers have the advantage of working from home and have access
to social welfare programs held in the community and organized by Patel. When
asked about how the weavers are empowered, Patel said, “Weaving is a
good source of income, especially with families where all members participate
and work. Several processes are ancillary practices that aid the weaver. Hand
spinning fiber, bobbin winding, and warping all fall under this category.”
A cultivated understanding of weaving as an indigenous art has led to Amba’s transparent foundation and function as socialistic entrepreneurship.
“It is a great debate these days over art versus craft, but
where do handwoven textiles fall in this category?” Indian
textile history marks the use of handloom weaves dating as far back as the
Harappan civilization, tracing a path through a time when royals coveted
textiles and artisans were members of a guild. The Arthashastra mentions
specific fabrics like white barkcloth, Banaras linen, cotton from South India
and blankets of soft, wispy fabric. The techniques and mathematical patterns
involved in weaving these have been passed down through generations in a
household, the industry being notably inclusive of women in times when they
weren’t allowed to hold jobs.
In medieval times, the industry flourished when a ruler was
inclined towards the arts and distinct fabrics from local regions were
cherished.
With respect for this deeply rooted legacy, Amba dedicates itself to handwoven fabrics and natural dyeing. Natural dyeing requires in-depth research on the complexity of fibers used to weave fabric and the strength at which a particular fabric absorbs dyes. It can also be affected by the count of the yarns. But after this intricate process, the design reveals itself from months of sampling on a loom.
She admires interesting craft techniques in other contemporary
designers as well, noting the innovative perspective on Bodice’s work in Kullu
on craft traditions. She also admires Padmaja’s spirit in her dedication to
working with WomanWeave during the four years of fabricating design banks for
her silhouettes.
As any ethically inclined label, Amba, alongside its craft
technique evolution, endeavors to underline responsible living. Patel’s
response to how a label can follow responsible fashion states that, “Every
label that concerns itself with these practices need only to address the issues
in the industry related to child labor laws, the factory environment in which
their clothes are woven, stitched or made, or how they deal with their waste,
and by-products of their design.” This vision is crucial to our commitment
to the earth, and it must be passed on to the newcomers in the field.
Patel looks to the newcomers as well, like Wasim their master
weaver, trained at The Handloom School, founded by Sally Holkar, to carry out
Amba’s work. “Our goal is to share our knowledge in fiber development and
keep pushing contemporary boundaries with our traditional two peddle, double
shuttle loom.”
Her message to handloom weavers starting their sustainable
brands is to craft their textiles with instinctive attention to their regional
crafts, as weaving is becoming homogenous.
“It is important for weavers to learn how to reinterpret
traditional design elements with contemporary design skills which will retain
their textile DNA, so one always knows the origin of the textile.”
This is the key to continuing the Indian textile heritage, the
tenacity of handloom weaving, not borrowed, but grown from within. Amba stands
for these values striving to pass down these skills from one generation to the
next.
Ambi by Sujata Pai has a distinct quality of making unique and cherished sarees from the rich heirloom of India. Her vision to showcase Indian textiles with a different eye is threaded through a needle passing through the time it has taken to inculcate this skill into a community of weaver families.
The simplicity of this concept is that it’s homegrown, tracing our roots back to ancient folklore and fables. These are etched into the motifs that are typically used in Ambi sarees- mango motifs, to follow the name, peacock feathers on a breezy pallu, elegant paisley pattern, lotus, and animal motifs. Her home base being Chennai, she herself is a voyager, setting up her printing in Delhi, and empowering weavers from all across the country with specialized local skills that make them unanimous experts in the craft of a particular weave.
The ancient weaves that have traveled from as far as the Byzantine empire are seen in Ambi’s one of a kind piece, embroidered with zari from Kutch mud plains of Gujarat. Ambi brings together fabrics and weaves of fine artistry and craftsmanship with a beautiful movement that creates a singular element to diversity. From the Banaras tradition to mulberry silkworm that has woven light as air Maheshwari silk, the sarees are a poetic eulogy to lost crafts.
The sunsets of South Indian hills fall over one fabric that takes to the Gota Patti work of Rajasthan sand dunes, and in the magic of the desert night, slip to the Bramhaputra with Muga Buta silk, the identity of Assam for a new dawn.
This journey of fabrics is seen in every piece by Ambi, cherishing crafts long borrowed from the 20th century France, antiques of Bali and even so far back as the Persian dynasties, breathing innovation in these threaded creations.
Woven seamlessly into one piece, the fabrics are intuitively in tandem, a dance of hues and patterns that carry the remnants of age-old heritage.
Priyanka Raajiv is a designer based in Pune who brings ageless culture into the modern world. Her design aesthetic and the clear vision of the architecture of a silhouette is what sets her apart. Moreover, she contributes to promoting the Indian handloom industry since the conception of her label. Her ensembles also hold a badge of responsible fashion.
She began designing outfits with a ‘Zero Waste’ approach long before the trend began. From the beginning of her labor, she held a certain respect for the fabric she used, and her label saw immaculate precision to avoid waste.
Textile experimentation made her work stand out. Incorporating these fabric pieces seamlessly into her new ensembles and, tailor-making new looks take forward an heirloom piece through generations.
The vivid detailing and hand embroidery in every collection showcase the profound thought and effort behind the handspun threadwork so integral to her design philosophy. Her latest collection, Praana, is based on the consciousness that breathes within us, and the understanding that life is a circle, and it grows through nurturing thought and understanding.
We are surrounded by this
energy everywhere. It is why spaces affect us; we inhabit our clothes every
day. Praana, the Autumn-Winter 2019 collection is inspired by this collective
energy that we possess and share.
Any waste fabric piece from the studio is put back in the ‘Iraada’ box to be used and integrated into a collection that embodies thoroughly studied design sensibility. This is turned into wardrobe pieces that become essential
In ancient China, there was a
belief that anything broken must be put together using gold. This belief
transcends the very idea of discarding anything.
In our daily stress and hectic schedules we often dismiss our negative thoughts and stagnant mindset. Aspiring to Chi, or Pranayama, the meditative state of understanding oneself, Priyanka Raajiv endeavors to unveil the illusion of separation, putting together seemingly unconnected pieces of fabric together in a puzzle that astounds you with its creativity and diligence.
Praana is a collection of carefully curated pieces, handcrafted to build a flow out of a mosaic of crude textile weaving and finesse of undiluted design. Upcycled pieces, like dupattas and scarves, become heirlooms in the process of recycling what is old into the artistic element of the new. With painstakingly earned expertise, the repurposed studio textile becomes intuitively structured through intricately embellished handwork.
The outfits rejuvenate your mind in with its texture and exquisite drapes and folds. It turns the complexity of fabric patchwork into a singular movement.
Praana at its core symbolizes the metamorphosis of energy forms. From breath to texture, and cold mist to the layers of fabric, it demonstrates that what appears cast aside is, in fact, the same thing in a different form. What appears new and fresh is a deliberate transformation.
This is the transformation that occurs at the Priyanka Raajiv studio with the discarded studio fabric in upcycling every piece.