Weaving festivity: Eid boom for Kashmiri embroidery

Shopkeepers and customers and the demand for Kashmiri embroidery has risen exponentially.

Shopkeepers and customers and the demand for Kashmiri embroidery has risen exponentially. PHOTO: KASHMIRI EMBROIDERY FACEBOOK PAGE

Manzoor Ahmad Sheikh, who runs a Kashmiri clothes shop in Madina Market, sees the business booming with the approach of Eidul Fitr.

“In the last two decades, the demand for Kashmiri embroidery has increased beyond our imagination,” he says. “The demand is at its peak in the last 10 days of Ramazan.”

Of Eid and excitement

Madina Market is the commercial nerve of Muzaffarabad. This is particularly evident as Eid shopping gains momentum, and women shoppers throng the area to look for the perfect Kashmiri embroidery item.

“I just bought two Kashmiri shawls and three suits with unique Kashmiri stitching and embroidery work,” says Dr Fauzia, a resident of Mirpur. “Madina Market is certainly the hub for all this, known particularly for the unique Kashmiri clothes.

Today, the market, with its variations of Kashmiri karhai (stitching work and embroidery), attracts everyone – from older, professional women to young college girls.

“I’ve been coming to this old market since my childhood,” says Humaira Karim, a university student. “I come here mostly to buy shawls, but now the needlework, with handmade thread, has left me very impressed.”

According to Sheikh, the demand gets so high before Eid and the wedding season that embroidered items have to be purchased from Srinagar, in Indian Kashmir. “These are obviously more expensive than local stitching,” he explains.


Aside from the traditional Kashmiri karhai and shawls, Swati and Multani needlework is also in demand.

Let’s talk costs

Shopkeeper Yousaf Butt says Kashmiri threadwork can be affordable for everyone, depending on thread quality and quantity, and also fabric.

“The same work with cotton thread can be done on suits, shawls, saris, bridal dresses and even bedsheets,” says Butt. “However, good Kashmiri embroidery items are costly, ranging from Rs5,000 to Rs40,000.”

Tricks of the trade

Previously, the designing work was almost exclusively all done by people who migrated from Indian Kashmir in the 1990s. Now, even local designers are doing great work.

“A good number of young girls in Muzaffarabad are stitching and doing needlework at home using cotton threat,” says Manzoor Ahmad Sheikh, owner of the Srinagar Shawl House and Karhai Centre in Madina Market. “This is how they are making ends meet. People from other parts of AJK and the families of Kashmiri Diaspora are their main customers.”

The end product is often the result of a meticulous process. “Before stitching, these Kashmiri dresses are tailored through a proper technique to ensure their fitting,” explains Yousaf Butt. “Today, there are literally thousands of items for customers to choose from.”

Published in The Express Tribune, August 1st, 2013.
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