Hastkaar-E-Khaas

Geru
Bagru Block Print Cotton Saree in Cream with Geru Buti and Rust Printed Pallu

3,000.00

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The Chhipa community of Bagru has been block printing
on the banks of the Sanjaria river since the 14th century.
The wooden block is carved by hand.
The dye is mixed by hand.
The print is pressed by hand.
Every buti on this cream ground was placed
by a hand that knew exactly where it was going.

The pallu is the colour of the Rajasthan earth in summer.
The black geometric bands are the shadow the earth makes
at noon, when the sun is directly above.

This saree was made for a woman who works.
Who understands that craft and competence
have always spoken the same language.

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Bagru is a village 32 kilometres from Jaipur where the Chhipa community has been block printing cotton since the 14th century. The process uses hand-carved wooden blocks, natural dyes mixed from plant and mineral pigments, and a resist technique called dabu — a paste of lime, wheat chaff, and gum applied to the cloth before dyeing to create the areas that stay unprinted. The cream ground of this saree was not left unpainted. It was protected by hand, square centimetre by square centimetre, so the colour would not reach it.

The buti are printed in geru — red ochre, the iron-rich mineral pigment that gives Bagru printing its characteristic rust-red. Each small floral motif across the cream body was printed individually: the wooden block inked, pressed, lifted, repositioned, pressed again. Dozens of individual impressions across 5.5 metres of cotton, each one placed by eye, by hand, by the accumulated knowledge of a printer who has been doing this work long enough to know exactly how much pressure produces the right ink spread. The result reads as a scatter. The labour behind it is systematic.

The border is a mustard-gold cotton stripe with a narrow black band — woven, not printed, running along the full hem and framing the saree’s edge. The pallu shifts to a rust-terracotta ground with dense black-printed geometric bands running horizontally — feather motifs, diamond grids, fine line patterns in sequence. The pallu is the printer’s showcase: a different palette, a different density of pattern, a complete change of register on the same piece of cloth.

In the reference images, the woman wearing this saree is at a desk. She is wearing glasses. Her hair is up. She is working, or about to. The saree is at home there — the cream and rust palette is quiet enough for a room with other things happening in it, and present enough that no one in that room would fail to notice it. The name is Geru. The pigment the Chhipa printers have ground since the 14th century. The colour of the earth the saree comes from.

The Chhipa community settled in Bagru village on the banks of the Sanjaria river in the 14th century, drawn by the river water’s specific mineral composition, which was known to fix natural dyes with unusual depth and permanence. Generations of Chhipa families have printed cloth in Bagru since then — the craft passing from parent to child, the wooden blocks carved and recarved, the dye recipes adjusted season by season as the pigment harvest varies.

The dabu technique — mud resist printing — is Bagru’s defining contribution to Indian textile history. The dabu paste, made from lime, gum, and wheat chaff, is applied to the cloth in the areas that must remain unprinted. The cloth is then dyed. The paste resists the dye. When the cloth is washed, the paste dissolves and the protected area emerges in its original colour. The cream ground of this saree is the result of that protection. Every cream square between the geru buti was covered by dabu paste by a Chhipa hand before the red dye touched the cloth.

The wooden printing blocks for the buti and the pallu geometric patterns are carved by specialist block carvers — a separate craft community whose work serves the Chhipa printers. A single block for a complex pattern can take several days to carve. The block for the floral buti on this saree has a registration pin at its corner — a small metal point that the printer uses to align each impression with the previous one, maintaining the even scatter across the full cloth length. Without the pin, the pattern drifts. With it, the print holds

  • Wash: Hand wash in cold water with a mild, pH-neutral detergent. Natural dye prints on cotton are robust after proper curing but require gentle washing to maintain colour depth over time.
  • First wash: Wash separately in cold water. The geru red and the rust palette in the pallu may release slight colour on the first wash — normal for natural-dye fabrics. Add a tablespoon of salt to the wash water for the first wash to help fix the colour. Will not recur after the first wash.
  • Do not: Use bleach, fabric softener, or harsh detergents. Natural dye chemistry is sensitive to alkaline conditions. Bleach will permanently strip the geru colour.
  • Sun: Do not dry in direct sun. Natural dye colours — particularly the geru red and the rust — fade faster than synthetic dyes under UV exposure. Dry in shade, always.
  • Iron: Medium heat on the reverse side. The block print surface does not require ironing from the front — pressing from the reverse maintains the slight texture the printing creates.
  • Border: The mustard-gold border is woven cotton — handle normally alongside the rest of the saree.
  • Store: Folded in clean muslin or a cotton bag. Keep away from direct light and moisture. Natural dye fabrics deepen slightly over years of correct storage — this saree will look better at five years than at five months if stored well.

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Bagru Block Print Cotton Saree in Cream with Geru Buti and Rust Printed Pallu”

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Geru </br> Bagru Block Print Cotton Saree in Cream with Geru Buti and Rust Printed PalluGeru
Bagru Block Print Cotton Saree in Cream with Geru Buti and Rust Printed Pallu
3,000.00
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