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Go to the shopA round handcrafted lunch carrier in cloth, sized to hold a tiffin column or a stacked meal between home and office. The circular form sits closer around a tiffin than a rectangular tote, which is the practical reason this shape exists at all. Each bag is sewn and finished by a small workshop, so handle stitching and trim vary slightly between pieces. For exact fabric, lining, and capacity, see the specifications.
Handcrafted with sturdy fabric and detailed embroidery Avoid soaking in water and clean gently to preserve embroidery and structure
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
This is a daily-use object, not a display piece. Most steel tiffins are round. A circular carrier wraps a tiffin column more cleanly than a rectangular tote does, which is why this shape exists at all and why a square lunch bag almost always wastes a half-inch of slack around a tiffin that a round bag does not.
Use it for the standard commute: home to office, home to school, home to a day trip. It fits one two-tier or three-tier tiffin column comfortably, or a single deep meal box with a snack container stacked on top. If you carry a roti box and a separate sabzi box, both will sit beside each other inside this bag.
The bag is not thermally insulated unless the specifications say otherwise. For long commutes or for keeping hot food warm, drop a stainless thermos jar in, or use a separate gel ice pack for cold items. Pair with an insulated tiffin if temperature retention matters.
Keep it clean by treating spills the same day. Wipe the inner lining with a damp cloth and let the bag air-dry before the next use. If the lining is removable, take it out and wash it separately; if it is sewn in, surface-clean only and avoid soaking the whole bag.
Store the bag flat or hung by its handle when not in use, so the round form holds its shape over time.
A round lunch bag is a small construction problem. Most totes are flat rectangles. A round one needs a circular base, side panels that curve evenly around it, and seams that stay tidy at the join.
The maker begins by cutting a paper or card pattern: one circle for the base, a long strip for the side wall, two reinforced strips for the handle. The cloth is cut from the pattern with care, since a wonky base panel reads visibly as a wobble in the finished bag.
Next, the side wall is stitched into a continuous loop, then attached to the base around its full circumference, easing the curve so no puckers form at the seam. A lining is added on the inside if the specifications include one. The handle is stitched, reinforced with a second pass at the join points where carrying weight will pull, and attached.
Finally the bag is turned right-side out, pressed at the seams, and checked: even base, no skipped stitches at the curve, handle holds its shape under a tug. The small workshop that makes these works by hand or with a light machine pass, depending on the maker; either way the finishing variations between pieces are part of the handcraft. For confirmation of fabric weight, lining presence, and exact dimensions, see the product specifications.
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