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Go to the shopHand-embroidered floral vines climb across the front of this compact, structured handbag, each petal and leaf built up stitch by stitch in coloured thread by a needle rather than a printing press. It holds the everyday essentials. Worked motif by motif, no two bags ever match exactly, so the one you receive is genuinely its own piece, equally at home against a festive kurta or a plain evening dress. For exact fabric composition and dimensions, see the specifications.
slight variations in threadwork are part of its handmade appeal. Avoid contact with water and perfumes. Spot clean with a soft, dry cloth.
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
This is an occasion bag first. Its size suits evenings out, festive gatherings, and wedding functions, where you carry a phone, a card holder, lipstick, and keys rather than a full daily load. Carry it as a clutch held flat against the palm, or by its handle for a structured silhouette.
The embroidered face is the reason to keep it visible. Set against a plain kurta, a solid saree, or a single-colour dress, the floral thread-work reads as the one decorative note in the outfit, so let the clothes stay quiet. For daywear it pairs with linen and cotton; for evenings it lifts a darker base shade.
Keep it off wet surfaces and away from rough denim that can snag a raised stitch. Store it stuffed lightly with tissue so the body holds its shape between uses. Treated this way, an embroidered bag stays presentable for years.
The decoration here is surface embroidery: coloured thread worked by hand onto a fabric panel before the bag is assembled. The maker first transfers the floral outline onto the ground fabric, marking where each vine, petal, and leaf will sit.
The motifs are then filled stitch by stitch. Satin and chain stitches build the solid petals, while finer outline stitches trace stems and veins, so the flowers gain a slight raised texture you can feel with a fingertip. The colour choices are the artisan's own, which is why two bags from the same cluster rarely look identical.
Once the embroidery is complete, the panel is cut, lined, and stitched into the finished bag with its closure and handle. This is the part that separates genuine hand thread-work from printed or machine-run imitations: the reverse of real hand embroidery shows the slightly irregular path of the needle, never a perfectly uniform machine grid. The piece comes from artisan embroidery clusters in India rather than a named individual maker.
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