Cloth Handicrafts: Tie and Dye

What is it?

  • Tie & Dye is the process of tying and dying yarn or cloth. The Ikat style is created through the resist dyeing of yarn.
  • In Odisha, the Tie and Dye textile weaving technique is known as ‘Bandha’.
    • The technique involves dyeing a fabric that is tightly tied with a thread at several points, resulting in a variety of patterns such as Leheriya, Mothra, Ekdali, and Shikari depending on how the cloth is tied.
    • The finished products are known by various names such as Khombi, Ghar Chola, Patori, and Chandrokhani, among others.

Types of Tie and Dye

Name Location  Features
Paagadu Bandhu Andhra Pradesh In this tie-dye process, the fabric is woven first, resist bindings are then applied to the fabric which is then dyed. 
Tehlia Rumal Andhra Pradesh  In this alizarin dyes are used to make the cloth oily. 
Ajrakh Printing Gujarat It is a block-printed textile that is resist-dyed using natural dyes, including indigo and madder. 

It is done mainly by the Khatris Community in the Kutch region.

Mata Ni Pachedi Gujarat Red is the main colour used here.
Thigma Jammu and Kashmir Natural ingredients are used to colour the woollen cloth such as soot to produce grey and apple bars and onion peels for brown.
Jadu Patua Painting Jharkhand Painted by Jadu Community.
Pichhwai Paintings Rajasthan Portrait paintings are mainly themed around lord Krishna on a cloth or paper.
Dabu printing Rajasthan It is an ancient mud resist hand block printing technique.
Muthangi Tamil Nadu This type of dress is mainly made for idols.
Sungadi Tamil Nadu Traditional tie and dye technique. 
Dhalapathar Parda  Odisha By Rangani Community of Odisha.
Kani Shawl (GI Tagged) Jammu and Kashmir It is made of delicate Pashmina wool collected from the underbelly of wild Tibetan and Ladakh mountain goats. 
Kotpad Handloom Fabric (GI Tagged) Odisha Its designs are taken from the geometrical pattern of a duck, hand fan, flower, palanquin, fish, animal, etc.
Tangaliya Shawl (GI Tagged) Gujarat It is a dotted hand-woven textile.
This entry was posted in Art and Culture, General Studies 1. Bookmark the permalink.