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Bridal Trousseau - Zardosi With Sequins, Stones And Mirror |
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About this
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View Large Image Bridal Trousseau
Hand-embroidered Zardosi with Mirror, Stones and Sequins is done on this Salwar Kameez dress piece.
Kameez - Georgette. Salwar - Georgette. Duppatta - Full Duppatta with heavy sequins and mirror zardosi work on chiffon.
Shades may vary slightly from colours on screen. ZARDOSI - A legacy from the Mughals The Mughal era brought richness to textiles and costumes of India. The Ari work or Zardosi is a kind of hand embroidery believed to be introduced in medieval times during the reign of Muhammed Bin Tughlak. Embroidery done on velvet, satin or any other heavy material came to be known as Zardosi. The work is done by laying the gold threads over the material and is very heavy when the weight of the fabric and the metal wire used for embroidery are combined. Zardosi used to be a work of beauty combined with display of wealth, but today other metals are used instead of gold. The earlier artisans of zardosi used only exclusive resham thread and wire hand embroidery on materials. The designs were original and mainly of royal taste. Wealth was displayed in the garments worn by men and women. But today, we can witness a blend of the past with the present, the old with the modern, the north with the south and the east with the west. Zardosi has become a well-known and fashionable hand embroidery.
In Persian and Urdu - Zar means Gold and Dodsi means To Stich Zardosi means Gold Embroidery Persian was the language of the Mughals.
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