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Orange Kalamkari Dupatta

Curated by Studio Moya
Rs. 4559
Product Details

Celebrate heritage with this beautifully handcrafted Orange 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-O-01
Style CodeSM-KDU-O
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 Wear This Dupatta

The Daily Drape
Fold the dupatta lengthwise into a broad band and loop it once around the neck, letting both ends fall forward over a solid-colour cotton kurta. Whites and deep indigo work best. Keep the kurta plain so the block-printed florals do the talking.

The Office Layer
Pair it with a straight-cut linen kurta in charcoal or olive and slim trousers. Drape it across one shoulder. The natural-dye palette reads professional without looking costumey, which makes it a dependable weekday option across seasons.

The Festive Accent
For a mehendi or sangeet, use it as a contrast dupatta over a teal or maroon anarkali, pulling one end across the chest and pinning at the opposite shoulder so the printed border frames the neckline. Skip the necklace. Oxidised silver jhumkas are enough.

Pairing Notes
Orange kalamkari sits well with earthy metals: brass, oxidised silver, and raw copper. Avoid gold-plated jewellery, which fights the matte finish of natural dyes. Kolhapuris or leather juttis ground the look best.
The Dye Kitchen Before the Block

Before a single block touches this dupatta, the cotton cloth goes through a preparation the artisans call saaj. The fabric soaks overnight in a solution of myrobalan (harad) powder and water, which acts as a natural mordant, opening the cotton fibres to accept and hold colour permanently. Skip this step, and natural dyes wash out within weeks.

Building the Orange
The warm orange you see is not a single pigment. It is built in layers. The base tone comes from alizarin extracted from the roots of the Indian madder plant (Rubia cordifolia), fixed with an alum mordant that nudges the hue toward rust-orange rather than red. Dip, sun-dry, repeat.

The Iron-Water Outlines
The dark outlines around each floral motif use kasimi, a solution of fermented jaggery and iron filings aged for weeks in an earthen pot. When kasimi meets the myrobalan-treated cloth, it turns a dull, grey-tinted black with a depth that synthetic substitutes cannot match. That grey undertone is the tell.

Block, Press, Lift
Carved teak blocks go into the dye tray, then onto the cloth. The rhythm takes years to learn. Slight misregistration between colour blocks is normal, expected, and valued as the hand's proof, with each block struck by a fist on the back to transfer dye evenly.

The Final Wash
After printing, the dupatta is washed repeatedly to strip unfixed dye and excess mordant. This is what softens it. A well-washed kalamkari piece drapes better than a fresh print, because only the bonded colour remains.
Is this orange kalamkari dupatta hand block-printed or machine printed?
This orange kalamkari dupatta is hand block-printed using carved teak blocks by artisans in Andhra Pradesh. You can identify the handwork by the slight bleed at motif edges and minor misregistration between colour passes, which machine or screen printing does not produce.

[Source: Tier 2]
What fabric is this kalamkari dupatta made of?
This kalamkari dupatta is made of cotton fabric treated with natural mordants before printing. Cotton is the traditional base for Machilipatnam-style block-printed kalamkari because it absorbs and holds natural dyes well after the myrobalan preparation.

[Source: Tier 2]
How do I wash a kalamkari dupatta without fading the colours?
Wash your kalamkari dupatta by hand in cold water with a mild detergent or soapnut solution. Avoid soaking for more than 10 minutes, and dry flat in shade, because direct sunlight can accelerate fading of natural dyes over repeated exposure.

[Source: Tier 2]
Are the dyes on this dupatta natural or synthetic?
The dyes on this dupatta are natural, processed with traditional mordants used in authentic kalamkari. The orange base uses alizarin from Indian madder root fixed with alum, and the outlines use kasimi, a fermented iron-and-jaggery solution.

[Source: Tier 2]
What is the difference between Srikalahasti and Machilipatnam kalamkari?
Srikalahasti kalamkari is entirely hand-drawn with a bamboo pen, while Machilipatnam kalamkari uses hand-carved wooden blocks. This dupatta follows the Machilipatnam block-printing tradition, which produces repeating floral and geometric patterns characteristic of that centre.

[Source: Tier 2]
How can I tell if a kalamkari dupatta is authentic?
An authentic kalamkari dupatta shows slight irregularities in print alignment, colour bleed on the reverse side, and an earthy scent from the myrobalan and mordant treatments. If the print is perfectly uniform with sharp edges and no reverse-side dye seepage, it is likely screen or digitally printed.

[Source: Tier 2]
Can I wear a kalamkari dupatta to the office?
A kalamkari dupatta works well in professional settings when paired with solid-colour kurtas in neutral tones like charcoal, olive, or navy. The natural-dye palette reads understated rather than festive, making it suitable for workplaces with Indian or smart-casual dress codes.

[Source: Tier 3]
Does the colour of a natural-dyed kalamkari dupatta change over time?
Natural-dyed kalamkari does shift subtly with washes and wear, generally warming and softening rather than greying. The alum and iron mordants bond with the fibre, so the colour matures rather than fading unevenly the way synthetic dyes often do.

[Source: Tier 2]
What is the significance of the floral motifs on kalamkari textiles?
Floral motifs in kalamkari draw from both temple art and Persian garden traditions that entered the Deccan during Mughal-era patronage. The repeating floral vocabulary on this dupatta reflects the Machilipatnam style, which absorbed Persian influences more heavily than the temple-narrative focus of Srikalahasti.

[Source: Tier 2]
How should I store my kalamkari dupatta?
Store your kalamkari dupatta folded in a clean muslin or cotton cloth bag, away from direct light and moisture. Refold it along different lines every few months to prevent permanent crease marks, and air it out periodically.

[Source: Tier 3]
Who makes the kalamkari dupattas sold on My E-Haat?
The kalamkari dupattas on My E-Haat are sourced through Studio Moya, which works with block-printing artisan clusters in Andhra Pradesh. Attribution is at the cluster level because production involves multiple hands across dyeing, block-carving, and printing stages.

[Source: Tier 2]
Is kalamkari a GI-tagged craft?
Kalamkari has GI protection under two separate registrations: Srikalahasti Kalamkari (registered 2005) and Machilipatnam Kalamkari (registered 2008), both listed under Andhra Pradesh handicraft goods at ipindia.gov.in/gi. Confirm which registration applies based on the production centre.

[Source: Tier 2]

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