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Urbanising a traditional craft

Meet trailblazer Rosalind Periera, who has been shaping the lives of thousands of underprivileged artisans through her initiative while reviving the traditional, dying art of hand-knotting.

She has no background in design or fashion. Yet her carefully crafted brand of artisanal jewellery, Maya, speaks volumes for her sound, skillful engineering. Meet trailblazer Rosalind Periera, who has been shaping the lives of thousands of underprivileged artisans through her initiative while reviving the traditional, dying art of hand-knotting.

“I feel an aesthetic is not learnt in a design school. Instead, it is developed by opening up your mind to the design influences that thrive all around you,” says Rosalind as we chat at Baro, the furniture and art store in Mumbai where she is showcasing her definitive pieces in a collection called Timeless Classics. “Every piece is a virtual artwork, and is a summation of a rigorous process of research and development, where we look at balancing design durability with sustainability and overall comfort. The process is often a collaborative effort between the designer and the maker.”

Rosalind has been working for over two decades with the patwas (karigars), hailing mainly from north India, and living as migrant labourers in Mumbai, to revive the painstaking hand-knotting techniques of aari and charakkam. What has resulted from this patient effort is a riveting collection of necklaces and bracelets made from vegetable-dyed silk, cotton yarn and metal. While aari involves bringing in the sparkling threads into the knots, charakkam is a technique of hand-knotting associated with Sultanpur in Uttar Pradesh. 

“It includes complicated knots and using them to weave different designs,” explains Rosalind. “The knots are used to encrust metal motifs like our individually hand-casted brass pendants, semi-precious stones (like amethyst, jasper, labrodrite, coral and pearl) and crocheted motifs into the finished product. The yarn for these knots is specially made on spinning wheels called charak (lending the craft its name) and is coloured, mostly with organic dyes.” Maya has been making use of these treasured techniques to create organic, utilitarian pieces of jewellery.

Shilpi Madan for New Indian Express

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