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Ratri
Cotton Saree in Black with Resham Embroidered Buti and Pallu

4,200.00

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Ratri is the Sanskrit word for night.
Not darkness — night.
The night that holds the stars in place
so the stars can be seen.

Every white flower on this black ground
was placed by a hand that understood
that the needle’s job on black
is to make the black worth it.

The body carries stars.
The pallu carries the whole sky.
The tree at the centre of the pallu
is the one the sky grew from.

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Black cotton is the most demanding ground for embroidery and the most rewarding. The contrast is absolute: white thread on black cotton produces no gradations, no softening, no middle tones. Each stitch is either there or it is not. The embroiderer working on black cannot hide any decisions. Every flower across the body of this saree was placed with that knowledge: the darker the ground, the more visible the light.

The body carries small resham buti in white, magenta, and green — scattered across the full black ground at intervals, each one a small burst of colour in the dark. From a distance the body reads as almost plain, the black dominant. As the woman moves and the light shifts, the buti appear: first as a shimmer across the fabric, then, closer, as individual flowers, each one stitched into the cotton ground with the resham running stitch the embroiderer has used since the craft began. The body buti are not the saree’s full argument. They are the opening statement.

The pallu is the full statement. A dense embroidered panel covers the complete pallu surface: at the centre, a large tree-of-life motif in white and magenta resham — the cosmic tree, the tree that holds the garden of the world in its branches. Around the tree, horizontal bands of smaller floral and geometric motifs in alternating magenta and white build outward toward the hem. The border carries a magenta stripe with white floral running along the full border edge. The magenta and white on the black pallu is the most visually dense panel in the collection — the closest the needle has come in these 32 sarees to putting everything it knows into a single surface.

In the reference images, the woman sits on marble steps surrounded by fallen bougainvillea petals: magenta flowers on white marble, the black saree and the magenta flowers in the same frame, the same colour, one living and one stitched. The embroiderer chose magenta for this saree knowing what the flower looks like. The name is Ratri. The night that holds the stars so they can be seen.

The resham thread work tradition on black cotton is associated with the embroidery communities of western India — the Kutch district of Gujarat and the Saurashtra region have produced dense multicolour thread embroidery on dark grounds for centuries, the black cotton base making the saturated thread colours visible at their maximum intensity. The embroiderers of these traditions work from inherited design vocabularies: the flower, the tree-of-life, the geometric border, the repeating floral band — each one a motif the embroiderer has stitched so many times that the hand moves without instruction.

The scattered body buti are the foundation of the work: each small floral motif requires the embroiderer to set the thread at the position, build the petals individually with the running stitch, secure the thread, and move to the next position. For the full body of Ratri, this means dozens of individual buti placements across 5.5 metres of black cotton, each one a separate construction event. The distribution — the spacing that makes the buti read as scattered rather than gridded — is maintained by eye, by the embroiderer’s judgment of what the finished surface will look like from a distance.

The pallu panel is the most technically ambitious element: the tree-of-life at the centre is a large, multi-stage motif requiring the embroiderer to plan the full composition before the first stitch. The surrounding bands of smaller motifs are built outward from the tree in sequence, each band a different pattern, each one filling the pallu surface band by band. The total embroidery hours in the pallu alone — the tree, the surrounding bands, the border sequence — represent days of continuous work. The magenta border stripe and the white flower sequence at the hem edge are the last elements placed. They close the composition.

  • Wash: Dry clean only. This is not optional. The density of the resham embroidery across both the body and the elaborate pallu panel makes professional dry cleaning the only safe care method for long-term preservation.
  • Hand wash: Not recommended for regular washing. If absolutely necessary: cold water, very mild detergent, do not submerge the full saree — spot clean the cotton body only. The embroidered pallu should never be hand washed.
  • First wash: Dry clean only. Always. The black cotton can run in the first wash and the multicolour resham threads each carry their own dye lot.
  • Embroidery: Never rub, press, or pull any embroidery thread. The resham stitches lie on the surface of the black cotton; they are the most vulnerable element of this saree and the most difficult to repair if damaged.
  • Do not: Machine wash, wring, or allow the embroidered surface to become wet without professional supervision.
  • Iron: Do not iron this saree at home. The density of the resham embroidery on both the body and the pallu means any ironing must be done professionally, face-down on a padded surface, on the lowest possible heat.
  • Dry: Flat, in shade. Always.
  • Store: Rolled around acid-free tissue paper — do not fold. Folding along embroidery lines will permanently crease and distort the stitch tension. Store in a clean muslin bag, away from light, humidity, and pressure. This saree represents days of embroidery work. Store it accordingly.

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Cotton Saree in Black with Resham Embroidered Buti and Pallu”

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Ratri </br>Cotton Saree in Black with Resham Embroidered Buti and PalluRatri
Cotton Saree in Black with Resham Embroidered Buti and Pallu
4,200.00
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