Qalamkari: Iranian Art Brings The Word and Craftsmanship Together

Published May 17th, 2020 - 08:11 GMT
Qalamkari, Traditional Art of Making Hand-Painted Textile (Twitter)
Qalamkari, Traditional Art of Making Hand-Painted Textile (Twitter)
Highlights
The 3000-year-old art uses earthy colors like indigo, mustard, rust, black, and green. Natural dyes used to paint colors in qalamkari art are extracted from natural sources with no use of chemicals and artificial matter.

The word qalamkari is derived from a Persian word where ‘qalam’ means pen and ‘kari’ refers to craftsmanship.

This art involves 23 tedious steps of dyeing, bleaching, hand painting, block printing, starching, cleaning and more. Motifs drawn in qalamkari include flowers, peacock, and paisleys.

The 3000-year-old art uses earthy colors like indigo, mustard, rust, black, and green. Natural dyes used to paint colors in qalamkari art are extracted from natural sources with no use of chemicals and artificial matter. 

For instance, craftsmen extract black color by blending jaggery, water, and iron fillings which they essentially use for outlining the sketches. While mustard or yellow is derived by boiling pomegranate peels, red hues are created from bark of madder or algirin. Likewise, blue is obtained from indigo, and green is derived by mixing yellow and blue together.

This article has been adapted from its original source.     

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