Phulkari

Among the things to miss about India for a lifetime of not being there are her textiles.

Below is an example of phulkari (flower work) a traditional embroidery of the Punjab.

 

It is an embroidery on domestic cotton woven cloth with silks imported from China and also with cotton and wool thread. 

 

The stitches used are darning, pattern darning and running stiches;  herringbone, cross and Colonial knot stitches; couching, split and Cretan stitches, chain and stem stiches, slip, button hole and zig-zag stiches.  Mirror work is sometimes incorporated also.

 

The themes are sometimes abstract and sometimes describe a domestic scene, a village scene, a travelling circus or have a theme related to ‘darshan’. 

 

Phulkari is part of dowries, often made by the bride herself.  It is used to cover the head, shoulders and torso.  It is also used as wall-hangings and bed covers.

 

Here are examples of phulkari from the Punjab from before its partition in 1947 between India and Pakistan.  There are also examples of couture by the designer, Manish Malhotra.  

 

On exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the spring of 2017.

 

 

 

DSC00146

DSC00029

DSC00001

DSC00129

DSC00109

DSC00028

DSC00004

DSC00010

DSC00011

DSC00001-1

DSC00003

DSC00090

DSC00131

 

DSC00114

DSC00014

DSC00005

DSC00008

DSC00010-1

DSC00032

DSC00105

DSC00106

DSC00047

DSC00036

DSC00040

DSC00142

DSC00120

DSC00124

DSC00132

DSC00048

DSC00052

DSC00035

DSC00101

DSC00135

DSC00104

Designed by Manish Malhotra, born  1965, Indian.  Silk, machine and hand embroidered, 2017.

DSC00067

DSC00063

DSC00062

DSC00061

DSC00060

DSC00059

DSC00030

DSC00014-1

DSC00133

DSC00122

 

DSC00086

DSC00134

DSC00076

DSC00004-1

DSC00112

DSC00097

DSC00098

Designed by Manish Malhotra, born  1965, Indian.  Silk, machine and hand embroidered, 2017

 

DSC00145

DSC00126

 

 

DSC00040-1

Courtesy of the Philadelphia Art Museum

4 thoughts on “Phulkari

  1. Magnifique travail de broderie, les costumes sont somptueux.
    Dommage que les gens de nos pays ne s’habillent pas ainsi.

    1. Ce qui me plait c’est que tout le monde (femmes) partagaient and partagent cette broderie. Dans notre societies, la broderie est reservee pour les riches seuls.

      Hier j’ai poste quelquechose sur la broderie Indienne rare qui s’appelle ‘potala’. Celle ci, par contre, etait et est seul pour les riches. C’est dommage.

Comments are closed.