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 Best Sellers |  | Home   Kurti Fashion of India Pretty Casual Dresses Chikan Embroidery | |
|  | |  | | | Kurti Fashion of India Pretty Casual Dresses Chikan Embroidery | | | | | | | |
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| $100.00 | |
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| $70.00 | |
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ctop453 | | In Stock | | Availability:
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| | Features | Top shirt in very light cotton fabric with Chikan style hand embroideryCold water hand wash individuallyGreat outdoor casual dress in summerShipped in 24 hours from Gurgaon, a New Delhi Suburb in India.
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| | Description | Women's top blouse from ShalinCraft is blissfully comfortable for summer. These chikan embroidered top blouse for women are made in extremely light cotton fabric. The special style embroidery on these blouse tops is called "chikan", developed in the 16th century in the courts of muslim kings in north India. The popularity of Chikan embroidered blouse tops never seems to wane. Wear these blouse tops outdoors in summer and you can relax in total comfort. They go well with trousers as well as skirts. Chikan Embroidery has patterns of different designs stitched using untwisted white cotton or silk (or rayon) threads on the surface of the fabric. In Chikan work, there is a fixed repertoire of stitches and it is usual for several types of stitches to appear on the same piece of embroidery. The different types of Chikan work done today are Taipchi, Bakhia, Phunda, Murri, Jaali, Hathkati, Pechni, Ghas Patti, Chaana Patti etc. Chikan embroidery is a very laborious and time consuming task. |  |
| | Product Details | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 1 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Kurti Fashion of India Pretty Summer Dresses Apr 11, 2009 Chikankari is fine, aristocratic, lace-like stitch work done by thousands of women in Lucknow and in other towns of Uttar Pradesh. It is said to have been introduced by the Mughal queen, Noor Jehan and was certainly made only for nobility in earlier times on the finest of muslin cloth. Perhaps inspired from Turkish embroidery, its characteristic quality is the use of white thread on white cloth. Its variety of delicate stitches, each with its own special name, creates shadowwork, netting and other subtle effects that require excellence of skill to make up for the absence of colour. Sometimes tiny pieces of foil are stitched fabrics and the popularity of chikan work among more egalitarian, economic and social conditions have brought mass produced, brightly coloured chikan work, ensuring employment to many Muslim women while starkly separating the excellent from the ordinary.
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