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Black Madhubani Silk Saree

Curated by Studio Moya
Rs. 12119
Product Details

Celebrate heritage with this beautifully handcrafted Black Madhubani Silk Saree by STUDIO MOYA, created by skilled artisans in India. Featuring delicate embroidery and breathable fabrics, it brings timeless elegance and everyday comfort for festive and casual moments.

Art TypeMadhubani
Dimension40X30X6
Materials & Care

Slight color variations are natural, reflecting its handmade character.
Do not bleach. Dry in shade and iron on reverse at low-medium heat.

Product Disclosure
SKUSM-MDSR-04
Style CodeSM-MDSR
HSN Code61059000
RegionMadhubani
StateBihar
Curated byStudio Moya

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

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Black gives this Madhubani saree a versatility that brighter sarees do not have, because it sits comfortably across formal and festive settings.

For a formal evening or a reception, let the painted pallu lead: pair the saree with a plain black or deep-toned blouse so the artwork stays the focus, add gold or oxidised silver jhumkas, and keep the drape clean with crisp pleats. For a daytime festival or an office-festive day, switch to a contrast blouse picking up one colour from the motifs, a mustard, red or indigo, and go lighter on jewellery. For a contemporary look, tuck the saree over a high-neck blouse or a fitted shirt and let the border do the talking.

A black base flatters most skin tones and frames the painted detail well. If you are petite, a narrower painted border with a lighter body keeps the proportions balanced, while a wider, denser pallu suits a taller frame.

While wearing, keep the painted sections away from perfume and deodorant sprays, which can mark both pigment and fabric. Move gently so the pallu art is not crushed. If the saree is silk, fold it along its natural creases at the end of the day rather than bunching it, and check the product specifications for exact fabric and care.
Madhubani began on walls and floors, then moved to handmade paper. Bringing it onto a silk saree is a separate craft in itself, and that adaptation is the story of this piece.

It starts with the cloth. The black drape is prepared so the surface will hold pigment evenly, because silk behaves very differently from paper, absorbing and spreading colour faster, so the artist works with that from the first stroke.

The composition is then planned across the saree, not as one flat image but as a garment that moves. The artist maps where the density sits, usually a richer pallu and border with a lighter body, so the painting reads when the saree is draped and the pallu falls over the shoulder.

The outline comes next. Madhubani is built on line, and on a black ground the linework must stay crisp and confident, because there is little room to correct a stroke on silk. The motifs are drawn freehand in the Mithila vocabulary: fish, birds, foliage and figures that carry meanings of fertility, prosperity and protection.

Filling and detailing follow. Depending on the style, the artist either fills shapes with colour in the Bharni manner or builds texture with fine hatching in the Kachni manner, layering until the motifs lift off the dark background.

Finally the saree is set and finished so the artwork survives draping and wear. Because each saree is hand-painted by Mithila artisans rather than printed, small variations between pieces are expected, and they are a sign of the hand rather than a flaw.
Is the black Madhubani saree pure silk?
The black Madhubani saree is described as a silk saree, but you should confirm the exact composition and any Silk Mark certification in the product specifications. Hand-painted Madhubani sarees are sold on pure silk, silk blends and art-silk bases, so the specification is the reliable guide. If certified silk matters to you, ask for the Silk Mark detail before buying.

[source: Tier 1 | primary kw: madhubani saree]
Does Madhubani painting have a GI tag?
Madhubani painting holds a Geographical Indication, registered in 2007 through the Geographical Indications Registry of India (ipindia.gov.in/gi). On a saree, the GI covers the hand-painted Madhubani art rather than the silk fabric beneath it. So an authentic piece is defined by genuine hand-painting in the Mithila tradition, not by the cloth alone.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani painting]
What colours does a Madhubani saree come in?
Madhubani sarees come in many colours, including black, white, yellow, red and natural off-white grounds. This piece uses a black base, which gives the painted linework a high-contrast, dramatic look compared with paler sarees. The colour is mostly a styling choice, as the painting technique stays the same across grounds.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani saree]
What motifs are painted on a Madhubani saree?
A Madhubani saree usually carries motifs drawn from Mithila life and ritual, such as fish, peacocks, parrots, foliage and human figures. Each motif carries meaning: fish suggest prosperity and fertility, birds suggest love and freedom. The exact motifs on this saree are best seen in the product images.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani saree]
How do I style a black Madhubani silk saree?
To style a black Madhubani silk saree, pair it with a plain or contrast blouse and let the painted pallu lead the look. Oxidised silver or gold jewellery sits well against the black ground. For festive wear, pick a blouse colour from one of the motifs to tie the look together.

[source: Tier 3 | primary kw: black madhubani silk saree]
Is the saree hand-painted or printed?
An authentic Madhubani saree is hand-painted by Mithila artisans, not machine-printed, which is what separates it from mass-market imitations. Hand-painting shows slight variation in line and fill from piece to piece. If a saree is priced very low or looks perfectly uniform, it is likely a print rather than true Madhubani work.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani saree]
How do I wash and care for a Madhubani silk saree?
A Madhubani silk saree should be dry-cleaned rather than machine-washed, since water and friction can lift hand-applied pigment. Keep it away from perfume and deodorant sprays, and store it folded in a cotton or muslin cloth away from direct sunlight. Refold it along different lines from time to time so the fabric does not crease permanently.

[source: Tier 3 | primary kw: madhubani silk saree]
Where does Madhubani art come from?
Madhubani art, also called Mithila painting, comes from the Mithila region of Bihar in India. It was traditionally painted by women on the walls and floors of homes, and has been adapted onto paper, silk and other textiles in recent decades. This saree continues that tradition on a wearable surface.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani art]
What is the difference between Madhubani and Mithila painting?
Madhubani and Mithila painting refer to the same tradition, named after the Madhubani district and the wider Mithila region of Bihar. The terms are used interchangeably for the art's distinctive linework, natural motifs and dense detailing. On this saree, that same tradition is hand-painted onto silk.

[source: Tier 2 | primary kw: madhubani]
Is a black Madhubani saree a good gift?
A black Madhubani saree makes a strong heritage gift because it pairs a versatile colour with a recognised Indian art tradition. It suits weddings, anniversaries and gifts for textile lovers or family abroad reconnecting with Indian craft. The hand-painted work gives the gift a story the recipient can keep.

[source: Tier 3 | primary kw: black madhubani saree]

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