Beautiful cushion, lovingly made from vintage embroidered mirrored patchwork pieces from the Banjara tribe with coins, mirrors and chains.
This stunning cushion is heavily embellished with classic vintage Banjara mirror work, beadwork and stitching, coins, chains and cowrie shells.
It is backed with red material and closes with a zip.
24" x 15"
Insert included.
These patches have an incredible amount of history behind them. Once used, loved and worn by Banjara ladies.
Due to their age and journey from India, mirrors may be cracked.
Free postage to anywhere in the UK.
*ALL INTERNATIONAL ORDERS SENT TRACKED AND SIGNED*
For millenniums, India has produced sophisticated textiles and with its’ location on the Silk Route they have been traded throughout the world. In India, textiles are to be found everywhere. They were made for the family to wear, for adorning animals and homes, for religious ceremonies, festivals, births and dowries. These embroideries were a significant part of the traditional way of Indian culture. Two of the most sacred old texts of India, The Ramayana and The Mahabharata, speak to how these textiles were used over four thousand years ago.
The most commonly used background fabric is woven cotton with embroidery thread of cotton, silk, wool, silver and gold. The present day Indian states of Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Andhra Pradesh, which are particularly arid, desert regions, make some of the finest and brightest needlework textiles in the world. It is said: The harsher the environment, the harder the life, the brighter the color, the greater and more intricate the craft. The women of the State of Gujarat, particularly, are known for their prolific and exquisite embroideries. The finer the embroideries the higher the status of the woman in her husband’s family.
Please Note these items are hand crafted vintage items.
-No two items are identical
-Coins and engravings are not perfect or symmetrical
-Dents, scratches and cracked, missing, mirrors links, stones or coins may occur
These are not faults or imperfections, they tell the story of the history and traditions in which they originate from, and should be embraced.