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Grey-Silver Banarasi Silk Saree

Curated by Aiaca
Rs. 23299
Product Details

Celebrate heritage with this beautifully handcrafted Grey-Silver Banarasi Silk Saree by AIACA, created by skilled artisans in India. Featuring delicate embroidery and breathable fabrics, it brings timeless elegance and everyday comfort for festive and casual moments.

MaterialPure Silk
Art TypeHandloom
Dimension12x16"
Materials & Care

Premium quality Banarasi silk; dry clean only for long-lasting beauty and durability Do not bleach. Dry in shade and iron on reverse at low-medium heat.

Product Disclosure
SKUAI-HLSR-SL-GY-01
Style CodeAI-HLSR-SL-GY
HSN Code50072090
RegionVaranasi
StateUttar pradesh
Curated byAiaca

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

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This grey and silver Banarasi saree leans elegant rather than loud, which leaves you room to dress it up or to keep it quiet. It is made for wearing, not just for display. Here are three ways to drape it.

For a wedding or reception, pair it with a contrast blouse in deep maroon, emerald, or midnight blue, and let the silver zari catch the light through the evening. Silver loves silver. Reach for temple jewellery or oxidised pieces rather than yellow gold, which can clash with the cool palette. Drape the pallu in a single neat pleat over the shoulder so the woven border stays in view.

For a daytime festive event or a griha pravesh, a tonal grey or soft pastel blouse keeps the look modern and calm. Add minimal jewellery and a low bun. The weave does the talking.

For a contemporary look, belt the saree over a fitted blouse, or pair it with a high-neck or corset-style blouse for sharper structure. The cool grey ground takes modern styling well. It suits younger wearers who want heritage without the traditional heaviness.

On body frame, the long vertical fall of a saree flatters most heights, while a slightly broader border like this one adds welcome structure for taller frames. A pinned pleat keeps the drape tidy through a long event.

While wearing, keep the zari clear of jewellery clasps and velcro. Avoid crushing the pallu under bags or a seat belt. A quick steam on low heat from the reverse settles travel creases before you step out.
Every Banarasi saree begins not at the loom but on graph paper. For this grey and silver piece, the angle worth understanding is the naksha, the design map that fixes where each silver motif will sit before a single thread is woven. The drawing comes first.

A designer draws the full layout, the grey ground, the silver buti, and the running bel border, onto squared graph paper, square by square. Each square stands for one crossing of warp and weft. The grid is unforgiving.

That drawing is converted into tied cord naksha or punched cards, a physical program mounted on the loom. This patient step is what lets a handloom repeat an intricate design faithfully across more than five metres of cloth. One misread card shifts a motif. So the karigar checks the mapping before weaving starts.

Thousands of fine warp threads are then measured, dressed, and mounted on the pit loom to form the grey base of the saree. Their tension must stay even, because the silver brocade is built straight onto them.

Working from the naksha, the weaver throws the ground weft and lifts chosen warp threads to insert the silver zari of each buti and the border bel, motif after motif. In the kadhwa method each motif is woven in separately instead of being floated and cut, which is why a true handloom motif sits firmly and looks clean from the reverse. The work is slow.

A detailed grey and silver saree can take several days to a few weeks at the loom, depending on how dense the motifs are. Once it is cut down, loose ends are trimmed, the saree is checked motif by motif, and the cloth is pressed flat. The weaver families behind this piece work in the handloom clusters around Varanasi, supported here through the Aiaca partnership.
Is this Banarasi saree handwoven or powerloom?
This Banarasi saree is woven on a traditional handloom in the Varanasi clusters, not on a powerloom. On the reverse you can see the kadhwa floats and small thread knots that handloom weaving leaves behind. A powerloom piece tends to show a flat, uniform back with cleanly cut floats.
How do I check if a Banarasi silk saree is original?
To confirm a Banarasi silk saree is original, turn it inside out and look for woven motifs with floats rather than a flat, printed surface. Gently rub the zari, since genuine metallic zari keeps its shine and does not flake away. A handwoven Banarasi also feels balanced in weight and falls with a soft, natural drape.
Does this saree carry the Banarasi GI tag?
The Banarasi GI tag covers handloom brocades and sarees woven within the protected Varanasi region, registered in 2009 (see ipindia.gov.in/gi). Whether this specific piece is issued under that registration should be confirmed from its own tag or certificate. We flag GI status for verification rather than assume it.
What is a silver grey Banarasi saree best suited for?
A silver grey Banarasi saree suits both daytime and evening wear because it reads softer than a bright gold Banarasi. It works for weddings, receptions, and festive occasions, and pairs easily with a deeper contrast blouse. For a griha pravesh or a festive office day, it stays elegant without feeling heavy.
What material is a Banarasi saree made of?
A Banarasi saree material is traditionally fine silk woven with zari, the metallic thread that forms the brocade. Modern Banarasi pieces also appear in organza, georgette, and blended bases, so the exact composition varies from saree to saree. For this piece, please refer to the product specifications for the confirmed fibre content.
Why are some Banarasi sarees heavier than others?
Banarasi saree weight depends on the density of the zari and the weaving style, not on purity alone. A heavily brocaded saree carries more metallic thread and feels weightier, while a lighter buti layout drapes more softly. Weight is therefore a style choice and not a reliable test of authenticity.
Which region does the Banarasi saree belong to?
The Banarasi saree belongs to Varanasi, also called Banaras, in Uttar Pradesh, where the weaving tradition has continued for generations. The craft draws on Mughal-era naksha design and a motif vocabulary adapted by local weaver families. Authentic Banarasi weaving is tied to this region, which is why origin matters when you buy.
How should I store this silk saree?
Store this silk saree by wrapping it in a cotton or muslin cloth and keeping it in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight. Avoid plastic covers, and refold it along different lines every few months so the zari does not crease in one spot. Keep perfume and naphthalene off the fabric to protect the silver zari.
What blouse goes with a silver grey Banarasi saree?
A silver grey Banarasi saree pairs well with a contrast blouse in deep maroon, bottle green, or midnight blue for a richer look. A tonal grey or silver blouse instead keeps the drape monochrome and modern. The saree usually comes with a blouse piece, which you can stitch to your own measurement.
Can I wear a Banarasi silk saree in warm weather?
A Banarasi silk saree can be worn in warm weather if you choose a lighter weave and a less dense zari layout. Heavier brocades suit winter weddings, while a softer buti saree like this grey one stays comfortable through longer events. Natural silk also breathes better than a synthetic imitation.

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