X
Exotic India Dhoti and Angavastram Set with Golden
Exotic India Dhoti and Angavastram Set with Golden

Exotic India Dhoti and Angavastram Set with Golden Woven Paisley on Border - Color Dazzling Blue

Product ID : 36081601
4.3 out of 5 stars


Galleon Product ID 36081601
Shipping Weight 1.23 lbs
I think this is wrong?
Model SPC39
Manufacturer Exotic India
Shipping Dimension 12.28 x 8.43 x 1.1 inches
I think this is wrong?
-
3,452

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown
  • Electrical items MAY be 110 volts.
  • 7 Day Return Policy
  • All products are genuine and original
  • Cash On Delivery/Cash Upon Pickup Available

Pay with

Exotic India Dhoti and Angavastram Set with Golden Features

  • Dhoti and Angavastram set with Golden Woven Paisley on Border

  • Art Silk

  • Made in India

  • Hand wash


About Exotic India Dhoti And Angavastram Set With Golden

Silk Dhoti and Angavastra : a pair of ritual wear These rich and gorgeous lengths of fine art-silk textile – antariya and uttariya in classical terminology and dhoti and angavastra, in contemporary, are a pair of wears worn by the presiding priest and his associates while performing a rite. Woven of fine quality yarn of art silk both lengths, one for wrapping around the body’s lower half like a dhoti, and other, over body’s upper part like a sash, have a mono-colour plain field though the borders are beautifully adorned with fine zari patterning. Though simple lengths of textile, the wears are unique in lustre and overall look capable of imparting distinction to any priest especially one who performs rites for a distinguished host on any ritually significant occasion – deity-worship, marriage, yajnopavit, or even when performing post death-rites. Though the Rig-Veda does not prescribe any dress code Upanishads mandate only unstitched lengths of silk or linen – flax, had the sanctity of ritual wears and hence the only costumes for a priest as also for anyone performing yajna-like rite. Kshaumya, subsequently called kusamana – linen, alone had in the Upanishads the status of ritual wear. An unwashed linen or silk was considered to have greater sanctity. As a matter of fact unstitched lengths comprised Indian people’s primary costuming culture till quite late. Even after conceding political superiority of Islamic invaders and their sewn costumes by 16th century, an unstitched length, a sari or dhoti, was yet the wear of nobility in its private life and for a ritual. Alberuni, a scholar from Central Asia, who was in India from 1017 to 1030 A D, wrote in his memoirs that Indian natives used 'turbans for trousers'. Some 800 years after in his book the Textile Manufactures and the Costumes of the People o - Multiple Sizes available