English, asked by kick16, 1 year ago

please give a factual description on indian weavers

Answers

Answered by vimlarawat44
1

India is a vast, diverse country with a rich history of weaving. Weaving is the process of making textiles by interlacing fiber threads. Examples of Indian cotton textiles have been found from 5000 years, ago and ancient texts known as the Vedas mention ''hiranya',' or cloth made of gold (more on that in a moment).

Weaving centers in India are known to have made saris for royalty in the 12th and 13th centuries. Saris are women's garments made from a single long piece of fabric. By the time trading customs were established along the fabled Silk Road, India was well known for its woven textiles

Regions, villages, and communities throughout India have unique weaving traditions with distinct customs and patterns. Depending on location, textiles may be woven from cotton, wool, or silk. Today, weaving remains important to India's economy with roughly 4.3 million people involved. The country even has a Ministry of Textiles.

Most weaving in India is done on handlooms. A handloom is a loom powered manually rather than by industrial means.

Basically, all looms are frames that hold the warp threads, those that run vertically for the length of the intended fabric, in tension. The warp threads are then interlaced with weft threads at a right angle, thus forming a weave. In Indian weaving vocabulary, you sometimes see the warp threads called the tana and the weft threads called the bana.

Answered by potrriselvan
0

India is a vast, diverse country with a rich history of weaving. Weaving is the process of making textiles by interlacing fiber threads. Examples of Indian cotton textiles have been found from 5000 years, ago and ancient texts known as the Vedas mention ''hiranya',' or cloth made of gold (more on that in a moment).


Weaving centers in India are known to have made saris for royalty in the 12th and 13th centuries. Saris are women's garments made from a single long piece of fabric. By the time trading customs were established along the fabled Silk Road, India was well known for its woven textiles


Regions, villages, and communities throughout India have unique weaving traditions with distinct customs and patterns. Depending on location, textiles may be woven from cotton, wool, or silk. Today, weaving remains important to India's economy with roughly 4.3 million people involved. The country even has a Ministry of Textiles.


Most weaving in India is done on handlooms. A handloom is a loom powered manually rather than by industrial means.


Basically, all looms are frames that hold the warp threads, those that run vertically for the length of the intended fabric, in tension. The warp threads are then interlaced with weft threads at a right angle, thus forming a weave. In Indian weaving vocabulary, you sometimes see the warp threads called the tana and the weft threads called the bana.

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