Many Indian clothes were ready to wear after leaving the loom. These were simple pieces of cloth of dimensions suited to the purposes.
Lungi,
Dhoti, and
Sari are few specific examples of
drape clothes. Other cloths produced according to specified dimensions are: •
Longcloth made at
Coromandel Coast was of the length of 37 yards or 37 to 40 yards. •
Qutni at
Damascus was woven as per market specified dimensions; for example, Length 6.13 meters width 0.7 meters was for
Syria,
Baghdad and
Constantinople,
Smyrna, and
Persia. But for
Egypt, the length was slightly more, i.e., 6.83 with the same width. •
Chautar an old muslin has been recorded with specific dimensions, i.e., length 12.44 meters and width 77.75 centimeters. Chautar was compared with , which was a three shuttle cloth, type of fine cotton variety produced at
Songjiang. • Tasar, a silk and cotton cloth used for lining in
quilts from Bengal was produced with 14 yards of length and 1.5 yards width. •
Alachas were 5 yards long. • A type of
Gulbadan (silk cloth), Sohren Gulbadan was with 36 feet long and 1 foot and 4 inches wide. •
Salampore was 16x1 yards. •
Sussi (cloth) a striped fabric was 10 to 20 yards long and one yard in wide. •
Khasas had dimensions of 20x1 or 1.5 yards. The number of threads in warp direction were 1400–2800 with the weight of 595 grams /pc (with 2800 threads). •
Mulboos khas special
muslins, reserved for royal aristocracy were measured 10 yards x 1 yard when produced of half-length. They had 1800-1900 threads in warp. •
Man-cheti was a "ginger yellow" cotton cloth made in India in the 14th century. Made in lengths of fifty feet and a width of four feet. •
Punjum, a kind of longcloth from the
Northern Circars was produced in a variety of thread counts. As per
John Forbes Watson, a common piece of Punjum weighs 14 pounds and is 18 yards long (36 Cubits). Its width ranges from 38 to 44 inches. •
Ghalta had a standard length of 9 yards and a width of 26 inches. == Trading practices ==