LAKIRA
Full drape
Pallu
Border

Varanasi

The Rose Meenakari Banarasi

₹54,000

Available

Each piece is singular; enquire and a curator will attend to you.

A Banarasi Silk silk saree in Rose Quartz and Antique Gold — the Rose & Antique Gold palette.

mulberry

The story of Banarasi Silk

Along the ghats of Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh, the loom has kept time for centuries. The Banarasi sari carries the memory of the Mughal court into the present — its dense brocade, its arabesques of gold, its unhurried opulence are the inheritance of an age when Persian floral grammar met the silk-weaving guilds of the holy city. It is a cloth woven for occasions that ask to be remembered.

The craft

Banarasi weaving is, above all, brocade — supplementary metallic thread laid across a mulberry-silk ground to raise pattern into relief. The finest pieces are woven kadwa, each motif built up individually on the loom so that no thread is carried and cut behind the design; humbler work is fekwa or cutwork, where floats run across the reverse between motifs and are trimmed away. The great sweeping patterns have their own names: jaal, the trellising net that covers the field, and jangla, the wandering vine that spills across the whole drape. The gold is tested zari — flattened metallic thread wound on silk — and its quality is the quiet measure of a piece.

Signature motifs

The vocabulary is unmistakably Indo-Persian. Buti — small scattered blossoms — dot the ground like stars; Bel — the running vine — frames the border and pallu in disciplined procession; and the Kalash, the sacred palmette-pot, rises through the endpiece as a promise of abundance. Read together, they are less decoration than a language of auspiciousness.

Reading an authentic piece

Turn a true Banarasi over. On the reverse of kadwa work you will find the motifs woven cleanly, the metallic floats between them honest and short; on cutwork you will see the trimmed threads themselves. Genuine tested zari holds a warm, unbrassy glow and does not flake. The house looks, too, for the Geographical Indication — Banaras Brocades and Sarees, registered in 2009 — the collective hallmark that ties a sari to the hands of Varanasi rather than to a power loom elsewhere.

To wear

A Banarasi is a garment of ceremony. In deep reds and vermilion it is the classic North Indian bridal drape; in ivory shot with gold, or in jewel tones for the festive season, it carries a woman through the most significant thresholds of a life. Let the weave speak — pair it with heirloom gold, keep the styling still and reverent, and allow the brocade its centuries of quiet authority.

Provenance

Cluster
Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
Loom tradition
Brocade weaving with coloured meenakari accents
GI status
gi-tagged
History
The Banaras looms inherited the courtly brocade vocabulary of the Mughals, translating Persian jaal and jangla into gold-woven silk. Kadwa figuring builds each motif discretely into the ground, so the reverse shows no long carried floats. It remains the reference standard for Indian gold-woven silk.