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Green Kalamkari Dupatta

Curated by Studio Moya
Rs. 4559
Product Details

Celebrate heritage with this beautifully handcrafted Green Kalamkari Dupatta 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 TypeKalamkari
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-KDU-G-01
Style CodeSM-KDU-G
HSN Code97030000
StateAndhra pradesh
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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Three Ways to Style This Green Kalamkari Dupatta

With a kurta set: Drape the dupatta in a classic V over a plain white or cream cotton kurta, letting the printed ends fall evenly in front so the green base grounds the outfit while the rust and black motifs add depth without competing with other surface work. Simple and effective.

As an accent scarf: Pleat the dupatta loosely and loop it once around the neck over a solid linen top or denim shirt. Cotton Kalamkari softens with each wash, so a well-worn piece drapes like a favourite scarf. Green pairs well with ivory, mustard, and terracotta.

Formal or festive: Drape it over one shoulder and let it trail behind with a silk kurta or a plain saree blouse, where the natural-dye palette shifts from forest to sage under changing light, adapting to both daytime ceremonies and evening gatherings. Effortless warmth.

Fabric and Drape Notes

This is a cotton dupatta, lightweight and breathable. It gets softer with wear. Expect the Kalamkari print to have slight irregularities in alignment and colour density, not defects but the evidence of hand-blocking.

Colour Pairing

Green Kalamkari sits in the earthy-natural palette. It works best alongside muted tones: off-white, beige, rust, deep maroon, and mustard. Avoid pairing with synthetic neons or heavily embellished fabrics, which can overpower the hand-printed surface.
The Natural Dye Ground

Kalamkari begins long before the block touches cloth. The cotton is first washed to remove starch, then soaked in a solution of cow dung and water, a step the craft calls bleaching, though it involves no chemicals whatsoever. This softens the fibre and opens it to receive dye.

Myrobalan Treatment

Next comes the mordant. The fabric is soaked in a solution of myrobalan, a tannin-rich dried fruit that acts as a natural fixative, bonding to the cotton fibre so that every colour applied afterward locks in permanently rather than washing out. Without this step, no colour holds. The treated cloth turns pale yellow, the base layer for everything that follows.

Block Carving and Iron Mordant

The wooden blocks are hand-carved from teak or sycamore, each motif cut in mirror image so it prints correctly on fabric. For the black outlines, the printer mixes iron filings with jaggery and water, fermenting the solution for days until it becomes kasimi, a deep mordant ink. Iron reacts with the myrobalan already in the cloth to produce a black that no synthetic dye can match.

Alum for Red, Overdye for Green

Rust tones come from alum mordant followed by immersion in madder root. Green is harder. The printer first lays indigo blue, then overdyes with yellow from pomegranate rind, two dye baths for one colour on this dupatta's ground.

Washing and Sun-Setting

After each dye stage, the fabric is washed in running water. Then it is spread flat under sun, where ultraviolet light fixes and brightens the dyes, a process repeated for every colour layer, sometimes five to seven rounds before the final wash reveals the finished palette.
Is this green Kalamkari dupatta hand-printed or machine-printed?
This green Kalamkari dupatta is block-printed by hand using carved wooden blocks in the Machilipatnam tradition. You can tell by the slight irregularities in motif alignment and ink density, the hallmarks of hand-blocking that machine printing cannot replicate.
What dyes are used in Kalamkari printing?
Kalamkari printing uses natural dyes derived from plant and mineral sources. Black comes from iron-jaggery mordant reacting with myrobalan, red from alum and madder root, and green from an indigo-plus-pomegranate overdye process.
How do I wash a Kalamkari dupatta?
Hand-wash your Kalamkari dupatta separately in cold water with a mild detergent on first use, as natural dyes may release a small amount of excess colour. Do not soak, wring, or bleach. Dry flat in shade to preserve the dye integrity.
Does Kalamkari have a GI tag?
Machilipatnam Kalamkari received its Geographical Indication tag in 2008, and Srikalahasti Kalamkari was registered in 2005, both under the GI Act of 1999 (verifiable at ipindia.gov.in/gi). This dupatta falls under the Machilipatnam block-printed tradition.
What is the difference between Srikalahasti and Machilipatnam Kalamkari?
Srikalahasti Kalamkari is entirely hand-drawn with a bamboo pen (kalam), producing freehand temple narratives and figurative art. Machilipatnam Kalamkari uses hand-carved wooden blocks to stamp repeating geometric and floral patterns. Both use natural dyes, but the techniques and visual outcomes are distinct.
Will the colours of this dupatta fade over time?
Natural dyes in Kalamkari textiles are mordant-fixed, which means they bond chemically to the cotton fibre through myrobalan and alum. With proper care (cold wash, shade drying, no bleach), the colours age gracefully rather than fading abruptly. Some softening of tone over years is normal and considered part of the textile's character.
What fabric is this Kalamkari dupatta made of?
This Kalamkari dupatta is made of cotton, which is the traditional base for Machilipatnam block printing. Cotton accepts natural mordants and dyes well, and it becomes softer with each wash. For exact fabric specifications, refer to the product details section.
Can I wear a Kalamkari dupatta to the office?
A cotton Kalamkari dupatta works well for everyday wear including office settings. The natural-dye palette of greens, blacks, and rusts reads as understated and professional. Pair it with a plain kurta or drape it as a scarf over Western workwear.
How many steps does Kalamkari printing involve?
Traditional Kalamkari involves up to 23 steps from fabric preparation to finished print. These include bleaching, myrobalan mordanting, block carving, iron and alum mordant application, multiple dye baths, repeated sun-setting, and final washing.
Is this dupatta suitable as a gift?
A Kalamkari dupatta is a thoughtful gift that carries craft heritage from Andhra Pradesh. It pairs well with a handwritten note about the block-printing tradition. The green palette works across seasons, making it a versatile choice for birthdays, festivals, or housewarming.
Why are there slight variations in the print pattern?
Slight variations in Kalamkari motif placement and ink density are inherent to hand-block printing. Each impression is pressed individually by the artisan, so no two prints are perfectly identical. These irregularities distinguish genuine craft from machine-printed imitations.

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