The Kashmir shawls The Kashmir shawl is a type of shawl distinctive for its Kashmiri weave, and traditionally made of
shahtoosh or
pashmina wool. Known for its warmth, light weight and characteristic buta design, the Kashmir shawl was originally used by Mughal royalty and nobility. In the late 18th century, it arrived in Europe, where its use by Queen Victoria and Empress Joséphine popularised it as a symbol of exotic luxury and status. It became a toponym for the Kashmir region itself (as cashmere), inspiring mass-produced imitation industries in India and Europe, and popularising the buta, today known as the Paisley motif. "The shawls made in Kashmir occupy a pre-eminent place among textile products; and it is to them and to their imitations from Western looms that specific importance attaches. The Kashmir shawl is characterized by the elaboration of its design, in which the "cone" pattern is a prominent feature, and by the glowing harmony, brilliance, depth, and enduring qualities of its colours. The basis of these excellences is found in the very fine, soft, short, flossy under-wool, called pashm or pashmina, found on the shawl-goat, a variety of
Capra hircus inhabiting the elevated regions of
Tibet. There are several varieties of pashm, but the finest is a strict monopoly of the
maharaja of Kashmir. Inferior pashm and Kerman wool — a fine soft Persian sheep's wool — are used for shawl weaving at
Amritsar and other places in the
Punjab, where colonies of Kashmiri weavers are established. Of shawls, apart from shape and pattern, there are only two principal classes: (1) loom-woven shawls called tiliwalla, tilikar or kani kar — sometimes woven in one piece, but more often in small segments which are sewn together with such precision that the sewing is quite imperceptible; and (2) embroidered shawls — amlikar — in which over a ground of plain pashmina is worked by needle a minute and elaborate pattern." from
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1911
Pashmina or kar Amir circa 1903. The majority of the woollen fabrics of Kashmir, and particularly the best quality shawls, were and are still made of
Pashm or
Pashmina, which is the wool of
Capra hircus, a species of the wild Asian mountain goat. Hence the shawls came to be called Pashmina. The fine fleece used for the shawls is that which grows under the rough, woolly, outer coat of the animal; that from the under-belly, which is shed on the approach of hot weather. Materials of an inferior grade were of the wool of the wild Himalayan mountain sheep or the
Himalayan ibex. However, the best fleece wool is soft, silky and warm is of the wild goats, and painstakingly gathered from shrubs and rough rocks against which the animals rub off their fleece on the approach of summer. This was undoubtedly the soft fleece wool from which were made the famous and much coveted 'ring shawls' in Mughal times. Unfortunately very inferior and second rate wool taken from domesticated sheep and goats provide most of the wool used today on the looms of Kashmir. The needle-worked
Amlikar or
Amli, made from Pashmina wool is a shawl embroidered almost all over with the needle on a plain woven ground. The colours most commonly seen on pashmina shawls are yellow, white, black, blue, green, purple, crimson and scarlet. The design motifs are usually formalised imitations of nature like the leaf, flower and tree designs mentioned above; they are always done in rich colours. The embroidery stitch employed is rather like the parallel darning stitch and is rarely allowed to penetrate the entire fabric. The outlines of the design are further touched up and emphasized with silk or woollen thread of different colours run round the finer details; the stitch used for this is at an angle overlapping darn stitch, all the stitches used are so minute and fine that individually they can be seen with the unaided eye only with difficulty. When Pashmina wool is used for the embroidery work, it is made to blend so intimately with the texture of the basic shawl material that it would be difficult to insert even a fine needle between the embroidery stitches and the basic fabric.
Do-Shalla The
Emperor Akbar was a great admirer of the shawls of Kashmir. It was he who began the fashion of wearing them in duplicate, sewn back to back, so that the under surfaces of the shawls were never seen. During that time the most desired shawls were those worked in gold and silver thread or shawls with border ornamented with fringes of gold, silver and silk thread. The
Do-shala, as the name designates ("two-shawl"), are always sold in pairs, there being many varieties of them. In the
Khali-matan the central field is quite plain and without any ornamentation. The
Char-bagan is made up of four pieces in different colours neatly joined together; the central fluid of the shawl is embellished with a medallion of flowers. However, when the field is ornamented with flowers in the four corners we have the Kunj. Perhaps the most characteristic of the Kashmir shawls is the one made like patchwork. The patterns are woven on the looms in long strips, about twelve to eighteen inches in length and from one half to two inches in width. These design strips, made on very simple and primitive looms, are then cut to the required lengths and very neatly and expertly hand sewn together with almost invisible stitches and finally joined by sewing to a plain central field piece. As a variation, pieces may be separately woven, cut up in various shapes of differing sizes and expertly sewn together and then further elaborated with embroidery. But there is a difference between these two types: while the patchwork loom shawls are made up from separate narrow strips, the patchwork embroidered shawls consists of a certain number of irregularly shaped pieces joined together, each one balancing the predominant colour scheme of the shawl.
Namda and gabba The basic material for a
gubba is milled blanket dyed in plain colour. Embroidery is bold and vivid in designing and done with woollen or cotton threads. Gubbas have more of a folk flavour blankets cut and patched into geometric patterns, with limited, embroidery on joining and open space. It is more like appliqué work. Colours are bright and attractive. They are cheap and used for
dewan covering or as floor covering—
namdas.
Knit shawls woman wrapped in a shawl. Triangular knit
lace shawls are usually knitted from the neck down, and may or may not be shaped. In contrast,
Faroese lace shawls are knitted bottom up and contain a centre back
gusset. Each shawl consists of two triangular side panels, a trapezoid-shaped back gusset, an edge treatment, and usually also shoulder shaping.
Shalli Shalli is a handwoven
twill weaved shawl made of
angora goat hairs.
Stole A stole is a woman's shawl, especially a formal shawl of expensive
fabric, used around the shoulders over a
party dress or
ball gown. A stole is narrower than a typical shawl and of simpler construction than a
cape; it is a length of a quality material, wrapped and carried about the shoulders or arms. Lighter materials such as
silk and
chiffon are simply
finished, that is, cropped,
hemmed, and
bound; heavier materials such as fur and
brocade are often lined as well. There are different types of stoles including Academic Stoles, Honor Stoles, Graduation Stoles and custom stoles. A stole can also be a
fur or set of furs, usually
fox, worn as a stole with a
suit or
gown; the
pelage or skin, of a single animal (head included) is generally used with street dress while for
formal wear a finished length of fur using the skins of more than one animal is used; the word stole stands alone or is used in combination:
fur stole,
mink stole, the namesake of
Dreamlander Mink Stole. File:Stole, designed by Mme. Jeanne Paquin (French, 1869–1936).jpg|Stole, designed by Mme.
Jeanne Paquin (French, 1869–1936) File:Dorota Rabczewska (cropped).jpg|
Dorota Rabczewska with a fur collar ==See also==