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Go to the shopHand-embroidered leaves stitched from the back of the cloth, so they read as soft shadows on the front, on a curtain made to be hung in window light. The craft is Lucknow Chikankari, the white-on-white needlework tradition of Awadh, recognised as a Geographical Indication in 2008. Each panel takes three to six weeks at the karigar's frame.
Morning light reveals the work. The leaves emerge. As the day shifts, they settle back into the cloth.
Slight color and embroidery variations are natural, reflecting its handmade character. Hand wash separately in cold water with mild detergent. Do not bleach. Dry in shade and iron on reverse at low-medium heat.
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
This curtain is meant for windows that get daylight. The white-on-white leaf embroidery only reveals itself fully when light passes through the cloth, so a sunlit window, a bay opening, or a balcony door is the natural place for it. North-facing rooms work too; the light is gentler and the leaves read with more shadow than glow.
Think of it as a single-layer day curtain.
Hang it on a thin metal or wooden rod with simple clip rings, so that the eyelet header sits flat and the weight of the panel pulls the cloth straight. Pair it with a blackout panel behind if the room is a bedroom. The chikankari layer stays facing the room while the heavier blackout does the practical night-time work, and you get to keep the embroidery in view all day.
The room palette should stay quiet. Walls in chalk, ivory, or pale grey let the embroidery sit clearly without competition. Wood and brass are natural companions; a dark teak window frame or a brass curtain rod gives the white embroidery something to register against. A loud printed wall behind it cancels the bakhiya shadow effect entirely.
For scale, measure the rod-to-floor drop at the window and add 4 to 6 inches if you want a soft puddle at the floor; add nothing for a clean sill or just-above-floor finish. For a 5-foot window, two panels with a moderate gather usually read best.
Use a curtain weight at the bottom hem during high-fan use. Cotton voile and mulmul lift in strong indoor breeze. The leaves can flutter out of frame.
As a gift, this is a housewarming piece, suited especially to a first home where someone wants one element of slow handwork in a living-room window. Pair with a short printed note on Lucknow Chikankari and its 2008 GI for the recipient.
Lucknow Chikankari is a white-on-white hand embroidery tradition of Awadh, traced to Mughal-court patronage in the city of Lucknow, and carried forward through the late twentieth century by cooperative revivals like SEWA Lucknow and by designer interventions that brought stitches such as bakhiya back into mainstream production. The craft was awarded a Geographical Indication tag in 2008 (Lucknow Chikan Craft, registered at ipindia.gov.in/gi), covering hand Chikankari produced within the Lucknow region. Today the work is largely carried by cooperative clusters, including Safe Society, that organise women karigars across the city's older neighbourhoods.
This leaf curtain leans on one stitch above the others. Bakhiya. The shadow stitch.
The work below is built across five stages.
First, the leaf-and-vine pattern is block-printed onto the cloth in a washable blue paste called neel. The print is a guide. It tells the karigar where every leaf and stem sits before a single stitch goes in.
Second, the cloth is mounted on an adda frame and the karigar works the leaves from the wrong side of the fabric, laying tight herringbone stitches across the back of each leaf shape so that from the front, no thread is visible, and instead a soft muted leaf reads through the cloth as a shadow.
Third, the smaller details. Veins, leaf tips, and connecting vines are worked with tepchi, the simple running stitch, and with occasional phanda knots at the branch points for grain-like texture. Each curtain panel can take three to six weeks of frame time.
Fourth, the wash. Once the embroidery is complete, the panel is washed and stretched. The neel print rinses away, and only the embroidery remains.
Fifth, finishing. The hem is turned, the header pleat or eyelet is sewn in, and the curtain is pressed flat for shipping.
The shadow-work logic is why this curtain belongs at a window. A leaf rendered in bakhiya is a leaf you read more clearly when light comes through the fabric. Hang it where light passes through, and the work reveals itself.
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