Linen-by-linen means the fabric was woven with linen thread in both warp and weft — no cotton in the weft to soften it, no blended thread in either direction to even out the texture. Pure flax both ways. The fabric that results is the most structurally honest textile in the collection: every quality the finished saree has comes from what linen is, not from what another fibre added to it. The body has the slight stiffness of new linen and the visible natural texture of the flax fibre itself — the crosshatch of warp and weft visible in the close-up as a fine irregular grid, each thread slightly different in diameter from its neighbour, the surface gently irregular, breathing.
The off-white is not quite white. It is the natural colour of the flax fibre after minimal processing — warmer than the optical white of bleached cotton, cooler than the cream of raw silk. In direct afternoon light, as in the reference images, it reads as a luminous near-white. In shade, it deepens very slightly, revealing the warmth underneath. The fabric close-ups show the texture at its most explicit: the swirled and pleated shots reveal the surface as a continuous landscape of linen structure, each fold of the fabric showing a slightly different facet of the same texture.
The self-stripe border runs along the hem and the running border as a slightly denser woven band in the same off-white — the stripe built by a change in weft density rather than a change in colour, visible as a subtle shift in the surface texture at the border edge. In the fabric close-up of the border area, the transition from body to border is a variation in weave structure: the body slightly looser, the border slightly more packed. No colour change. No metallic thread. Just linen being more of itself at the edge.
The reference images were shot in a white courtyard with jasmine in a brass bowl — the most minimal, most elemental setting in the collection. Jasmine, white marble, brass, linen. The photographer understood what this saree required: nothing competing with the texture, nothing distracting from the fabric being exactly what it is. The name is Sveta. Pure white in Sanskrit. The colour of jasmine. The colour of the morning before the day has decided anything yet.
















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