Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections

Sari Indian Dress Biography

Source(Google.com.pk)
        Traditional Indian attire took on political significance during India's struggle for independence from British rule during the first half of the 20th century. Mohandas Gandhi famously wore the traditional Indian dhoti and shawl. The dhoti is rectangular strip of cloth about 7 yards long. Men wear the dhoti wrapped and knotted around their legs and waists.
        Gandhi hand spun the yarn for the fabrics he wore. In India, Gandhi's choice of attire became politically meaningful because it spoke to the movement to reject British goods and support Indian products and traditions.
    Sari
        The sari, sometimes spelled "saree," is a long strip of unstitched cloth that women drape over the body in several different ways. In the late 20th century, the most common way to wear the sari is to wrap it around the waist and drape it over the shoulder. Women wear the sari over a petticoat and a fitted short-sleeved blouse called a "choli" or "ravika."
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    The Sari in History
        Historians trace mentions of the draped fabric clothing as far back as the Indus Valley Civilization (2800 to 1800 B.C.), where archaeologists uncovered a statue of a priest wearing a wrapped cloth. Though without precise dates, most historians agree that saris developed simultaneously in North and South India, and that women have worn the sari in its current form for hundreds of years.
        In the late 19th and 20th century the sari became a symbol of the Indian nation. Several famous artists like Ravi Varma and Abanindranath Tagore made paintings featuring several women dressed in the regional variations of the sari to symbolize the diversity and unity of the Indian people.
    Dhoti
        The Indian western states of Rajasthan, Gujarat and Maharashtra have a large number of men who continue to wear the dhoti. There are many regional variations in how men wear the dhoti across India. In Gujarat, for example, men wear the dhoti with a short kurta on top, called a "kediya" (a kurta is a loose tunic buttoned halfway down the front).
        The dhoti is also subject to several rules of etiquette. In the southern part of India, men sometimes pull up the dhoti and fold the top around the waist--the dhoti then ends slightly under the knees. However, many believe that talking to women with the dhoti worn in this shorter manner is indecent and disrespectful.
    The Dhoti in History
        Like the sari, Indian have worn the dhoti and styles similar to the dhoti for several centuries. Several dhoti styles appear in the Amaravati sculptures made during the Satavahana dynasty of south India (2nd to 3rd century B.C.). Many of the dhotis carved in the Amaravati sculptures also have kamarbands, a wide wrapped waistband whose name is the source of the Western cummerbund.
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Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

Sari Indian Dress Photo Imaegs Ppictures New Designs Collections 

 


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