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Madhubani peacock Jhola Bag

Curated by Prayatna
Rs. 1140
Product Details

This Madhubani peacock Jhola Bag by PRAYATNA blends artisan craft with practical design. Hand-stitched and embroidered in India, it carries your essentials with charm and durable workmanship for everyday use.

MaterialCotton Canvas
Art TypeMadhubani
Dimension40X30X6
Materials & Care

slight variations in threadwork are part of its handmade appeal.
Avoid contact with water and perfumes. Spot clean with a soft, dry cloth.

Product Disclosure
SKUPR-MDHB-PK-01
Style CodePR-MDHB-PK
HSN Code42022220
RegionNoida
StateUttar pradesh
Curated byPrayatna

Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.

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A jhola bag earns its place by being the one you reach for without thinking, and a hand-painted Madhubani peacock turns that everyday habit into something people stop to look at. Here is where this bag fits.

Everyday carry. The open top and long strap make it an easy market, library or office-extra bag, roomy enough for a book, a water bottle and the usual pocket clutter. Worn across the body or over one shoulder, the painted peacock faces out, so the craft does the talking. It pairs most happily with plain clothes, a kurta, a sari, or a simple shirt and jeans, where it reads as the one bright element.

Gift and occasion. A painted Madhubani bag is a ready gift for someone who likes craft but has enough things to hang on a wall, since it carries the same Mithila art in a form they will actually use. It travels well as a small piece of Bihar to take abroad, which makes it a common pick for relatives overseas.

Caring for it in use. Treat the painted panel gently: spot-clean with a damp cloth rather than soaking, and avoid scrubbing the peacock directly. Keep it out of long, harsh sun, which can dull the colour over time, and do not overfill it so the painted cloth does not stretch. For the exact fabric, lining and dimensions of this piece, see the product specifications.
Madhubani began on walls and floors, painted by women in the villages of Mithila for weddings and festivals. Putting that same art on a cloth bag is a deliberate adaptation, not a shortcut, and it changes how the painter works. Here is how a peacock reaches this jhola bag.

From wall to cloth. A painting meant for a still mud wall has to be rethought for a bag that flexes, folds and gets carried. The composition is sized to the panel of the bag and placed so the peacock is not lost in a fold, which is a different problem from filling a framed sheet of paper.

Drawing the peacock. The outline goes down first in the Mithila double line, two parallel strokes that a hand draws with a slight, living wobble. The peacock's body, long neck and fanned plumage are built from these doubled lines before any colour is added.

Filling the colour. The shapes are then filled in dense, flat colour, the manner most associated with the Bharni style, with fine detailing worked back over the fill. On cloth the paint has to survive handling, so the work is sealed rather than left raw like a paper painting.

Finishing the bag. Only after the panel is painted and set is the bag made up, with its strap and open top. Each one is hand-painted by artists of the Prayatna cluster in Madhubani, Bihar, so the peacocks vary slightly from bag to bag, the honest mark of work done by hand.
Is the Madhubani peacock jhola bag hand-painted or printed?
The Madhubani peacock jhola bag is hand-painted by artists of the Prayatna cluster in Bihar, not machine-printed. The clearest tell is the double line: every outline is two parallel hand-drawn strokes that wobble slightly, where a print stays mechanically even. Because each bag is painted by hand, no two peacocks come out identical.
What does the peacock mean in Madhubani art?
In Madhubani art the peacock is a symbol of love, beauty and the coming monsoon, and it carries religious weight as a bird linked to Krishna and Saraswati. It is rarely just decoration in Mithila painting. On this bag it brings that older wall-painting symbolism onto an everyday object.
What is a jhola bag?
A jhola bag is a roomy open-top cloth shoulder bag with a long strap, used across India as an everyday carry-all. It suits markets, books and daily errands and folds away easily when empty. This one is hand-painted with a Madhubani peacock.
What material is the jhola bag made from?
The jhola bag is made from a sturdy natural-fibre cloth such as cotton, the usual base for a painted Madhubani bag. For the exact fabric, lining and dimensions of this piece, please check the product specifications. A firm weave is what lets the painted panel hold its shape.
How do I clean a hand-painted Madhubani bag?
Clean a hand-painted Madhubani bag by spot-cleaning with a damp cloth rather than soaking or machine-washing it. Avoid scrubbing the painted peacock directly, and keep the bag out of long, harsh sunlight, which can dull the colour. Do not overfill it, so the painted cloth does not stretch.
Does Madhubani have a GI tag?
Madhubani painting holds a Geographical Indication registered in 2007 to producers in the Madhubani and Darbhanga districts of Bihar, recorded with India's GI Registry at ipindia.gov.in/gi. The tag covers the painting tradition itself, so on a bag it is the artwork that belongs to the protected craft, not the cloth. Buying from a Mithila cluster like Prayatna keeps the work within that tradition.
Is this bag a good gift?
This bag makes an easy gift for anyone who likes Indian craft but does not need another thing to hang on a wall, since it carries the same Mithila art in a usable form. It is light to post and travels well abroad. The hand-painted peacock gives it a story the recipient can repeat.
Can I use the Madhubani jhola bag every day?
Yes, the Madhubani jhola bag is built for daily use, with a roomy body and a long shoulder strap for markets, books or errands. Wearing it regularly is fine as long as the painted panel is treated gently and kept out of heavy rain and strong sun. It pairs well with plain clothes, where the peacock stands out.
Which Madhubani style is the peacock painted in?
The Madhubani peacock here is worked in filled, flat colour, the manner most associated with the Bharni style, over a double-line outline. Mithila painting has five recognised styles: Bharni, Kachni, Kohbar, Tantric and Godna. A colourful motif like a peacock is commonly rendered in the filled-colour approach.
Will the painted colours fade?
The painted colours can fade if the bag is left in strong sun for long periods or washed harshly, as with most hand-painted craft. Keeping it out of direct sunlight and spot-cleaning rather than soaking will hold the peacock's colour far longer. Gentle, occasional use is kinder to the paint than daily rough handling.

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