Inside Gaurav's block printing and sewing factory in Sanganer, Rajasthan, where generations of textile heritage continue

INDIA & PLACE

Rajasthan's TEXTILE
HERITAGE

The desert state that clothed the world. Across a landscape of sand and stone, Rajasthan's artisans have woven, printed, dyed, and embroidered textiles of extraordinary beauty for over a thousand years.

Traditional wooden block-printing blocks stacked in rows at a Sanganer artisan workshop, each block hand-carved with intricate patterns passed down through generations
Artisan Anushree demonstrates block-printing technique at Daughters of India facility, carefully pressing carved wooden blocks onto white cotton fabric to create intricate patterns
Aerial view of wooden printing blocks being carved at a Rajasthani workshop, showing the precision detail work that defines Sanganer block-making traditions

Women artisans at Anushree's facility in Rajasthan inspecting block-printed cotton fabric, continuing the region's centuries-old textile traditions

THE DESERT STATE THAT clothed THE WORLD

It is one of the great paradoxes of Indian craft. Rajasthan ~ the Land of Kings ~ is India's largest state by area and one of its most arid. The Thar Desert covers much of its western expanse. Rainfall is sparse and unreliable. Water, the essential ingredient of textile production, is precious here in ways that most of the world struggles to comprehend.

And yet this is where India's most vibrant textile traditions took root and flourished. Not in the lush river valleys of Bengal, not in the monsoon-drenched coasts of Kerala, but in the desert. The explanation lies in a convergence of forces ~ royal patronage, strategic trade routes, community knowledge, and a particular quality of light and air that proved ideal for the making and drying of printed and dyed cloth.

The scarcity of water did not prevent textile production in Rajasthan. It shaped it. Artisans developed techniques that were efficient with water, dyeing processes that maximised colour from minimal quantities, drying methods that harnessed the relentless sun. The arid climate that made farming difficult made textile work possible in ways that humid regions could not match. Cloth dried quickly between colour passes. Dyes set cleanly in the dry air. The harsh conditions produced textiles of remarkable clarity and permanence.


“In a landscape dominated by sand and stone, where the palette is muted for much of the year, colour becomes an assertion of life. The desert taught Rajasthan's people to carry their own colour with them.”

Daughters of India


Artisan makers gathered at the Daughters of India factory in Rajasthan, representing the community of craftspeople who sustain the region's textile heritage

ROYAL patronage ~ RAJPUT AND MUGHAL COURTS

Rajasthan's textile traditions did not develop in isolation. They were cultivated, encouraged, and lavishly supported by successive ruling dynasties who understood both the beauty and the economic value of fine cloth.

The Rajput kings who ruled Rajasthan's numerous princely states were devoted patrons of the arts. Textile craft held a particularly honoured place in the hierarchy of court arts. Printed and embroidered textiles served as gifts of state, as items of trade, as expressions of wealth and taste.

The arrival of Mughal influence in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries intensified this patronage. The Mughal emperors ~ particularly Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan ~ were sophisticated connoisseurs of textiles. Akbar established royal workshops (karkhanas) that brought together the finest artisans from across the empire. The exchange between Rajput and Mughal aesthetic traditions produced a flowering of textile art. Rajput boldness met Mughal refinement. Geometric patterns met naturalistic floral motifs. The results can still be seen in the printing blocks used across Rajasthan today ~ patterns that carry the DNA of both traditions.

This patronage had a practical dimension as well. Royal courts provided a guaranteed market for the finest work, allowing artisans to invest time in developing their skills without the constant pressure of commercial uncertainty. Families could afford to train the next generation. The legacy of royal patronage is visible in the depth and sophistication of Rajasthani textile traditions today.


MULTIPLE TRADITIONS IN one STATE

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Sanganer Block Printing

The Sanganer tradition, practised in the district just south of Jaipur, is perhaps Rajasthan's most refined printing style. Characterised by delicate floral motifs ~ jasmine, lotus, marigold ~ printed on white or pale backgrounds, Sanganer work has a luminous, almost ethereal quality. The tradition favours fine detail, subtle colour palettes, and a precision of registration that speaks to generations of practice. This is the printing tradition that Daughters of India works within, and it represents the lineage behind every piece we produce.

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Bagru Dabu Printing

Thirty kilometres from Sanganer, the village of Bagru maintains a dramatically different printing tradition. Where Sanganer is delicate, Bagru is bold. The Bagru tradition centres on dabu printing ~ a mud-resist technique that uses a paste made from clay, gum, and lime to block dye from certain areas of the cloth. The result is striking geometric patterns in deep indigo, rust, and black against the natural colour of the cotton. Bagru printing has an earthiness, a connection to the desert landscape itself, that makes it immediately recognisable.

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Bandhani Tie-Dye

Bandhani is the ancient art of resist-dyeing through tying. Artisans ~ predominantly women ~ use their fingernails to pinch tiny portions of cloth, which are then bound tightly with thread before the fabric is immersed in dye. The tied portions resist the colour, creating patterns of undyed dots against a coloured ground. A single bandhani textile may contain thousands of individually tied points, each one placed with precision. In Rajasthan, bandhani is traditionally associated with the cities of Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Udaipur, and remains an essential element of bridal wear and festival clothing.

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Leheriya Waves

Leheriya, meaning "waves," is a tie-dye technique unique to Rajasthan. Fabric is rolled diagonally, bound at intervals, and dyed to create parallel diagonal stripes that ripple across the cloth like waves. A variant called badal ~ meaning "cloud" ~ produces softer, more diffused patterns by folding the fabric in different ways. Leheriya turbans are a traditional Rajasthani garment, their vivid diagonal stripes marking festivals and celebrations.

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Carpet Weaving and Dhurries

Rajasthan has a significant carpet weaving tradition, particularly around Jaipur and Bikaner. The weaving of dhurries ~ flat-woven rugs ~ is widespread across the state, with patterns that often mirror the geometric motifs found in block printing. The connection between printed textile patterns and woven textile patterns in Rajasthan is a reminder that these traditions do not exist in silos. They share a visual language, a sense of design, and often the same communities of makers.

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Embroidery Traditions

Rajasthani embroidery traditions are diverse and deeply tied to community identity. Aari embroidery, using a hooked needle that creates chain stitch with remarkable speed, is practised across the state. Kashida embroidery ~ intricate surface embroidery often worked on silk or velvet ~ adorns everything from clothing to household furnishings. Mirror work (shisha), in which small mirrors are stitched into fabric to catch and reflect light, is particularly associated with the western desert regions near the Gujarat border. Each represents a community's aesthetic identity, passed from mother to daughter across generations.


Paint being poured onto a wooden printing block in preparation for hand block printing at a Rajasthani artisan workshop
Gaurav block printing the Kyra pattern at his Sanganer workshop, a black-and-white portrait of Rajasthan's living printing tradition
Close-up of a Sanganer artisan hand-carving a wooden printing block, preserving the traditional block-making craft of Rajasthan

“The Thar Desert shapes Rajasthani textiles in ways that go beyond the practical. The vivid reds, oranges, yellows, and pinks of Rajasthani clothing are not merely decorative ~ they are a cultural response to an environment that offers little natural colour.

The Thar Desert Influence


Woman artisan in a yellow sari working at the block printing table, representing the living tradition of Rajasthani textile craft

TRADE ROUTES AND global REACH

Rajasthan's textile traditions did not develop for local consumption alone. The state's position at the crossroads of major trade routes ensured that its textiles reached markets far beyond India's borders from an early date.

The ancient trade routes that connected India with Central Asia, Persia, and eventually Europe passed through Rajasthan. Camel caravans carried printed and dyed textiles from Jaipur and other Rajasthani centres to Delhi, from where they entered broader trade networks. Rajasthani block-printed textiles were traded along routes that connected to the Silk Road, reaching markets in Persia, Arabia, Southeast Asia, and ultimately Europe.

By the seventeenth century, Indian printed cottons ~ many of them produced in Rajasthan ~ had become objects of intense desire in European markets. France banned Indian printed cottons in 1686. England followed in 1720. These bans ~ explored in detail on our Chintz Trade page ~ are perhaps the most powerful testament to the quality and desirability of Rajasthani textiles.


Shelves of carved wooden printing blocks arranged by pattern, representing centuries of accumulated design knowledge in Rajasthan

A PRODUCT OF cultural exchange

The trade routes also brought influence inward. Persian floral motifs entered the Rajasthani design vocabulary. Chinese lotus patterns appeared alongside indigenous Indian flowers. European demand for particular colours and patterns shaped production. Rajasthani textiles are, and have always been, the product of cultural exchange as much as local tradition.

For centuries, Rajasthan's textiles travelled the world's trade routes ~ from Jaipur to Persia, from the Silk Road to European courts.


Inside Gaurav's block printing factory in Sanganer, Rajasthan, where traditional printing tools and methods have been preserved across generations
Indian artisans inspecting block-printed cotton fabric in soft Primrose pink at Daughters of India's artisan facility, showcasing the quality-control stage of handcrafted textile production
Gaurav's grandfather at the original family printing facility, a black-and-white portrait connecting Rajasthan's textile heritage across generations

MODERN RAJASTHAN ~ textile hub

Today, Jaipur is India's textile hub in every meaningful sense. The city and its surrounding districts produce textiles for domestic and international markets on a scale that would have astonished the Mughal emperors. But the fundamental methods ~ the carved blocks, the mixed dyes, the rhythmic press of hand on wood on cloth ~ remain unchanged.

The Indian government has recognised the importance of Rajasthan's textile heritage through various craft initiatives. Geographical Indication (GI) tags have been granted to several Rajasthani textile traditions, providing legal recognition and protection for traditional craft practices. Government-supported craft cooperatives help artisans access markets and maintain fair pricing. Training programmes aim to pass traditional skills to new generations.

Tourism has become an increasingly important dimension of Rajasthan's textile economy. Craft tourism ~ visitors who come specifically to see textile production, to visit workshops, to learn about printing and dyeing techniques ~ provides additional income to artisan communities and raises awareness of traditional crafts. The Anokhi Museum of Hand Printing in Amber, textile tours in Sanganer and Bagru, and craft-focused itineraries offered by tour operators all contribute to a growing understanding of and appreciation for Rajasthani textile traditions.

Yet challenges persist. Machine printing offers faster, cheaper alternatives. Younger generations in artisan families are drawn to urban employment and digital careers. Water scarcity, always a factor in Rajasthan, is intensifying with climate change. The market for traditional textiles, while growing in some segments, faces constant pressure from mass-produced alternatives.

The survival of Rajasthan's textile heritage depends, ultimately, on people choosing handmade. Choosing the imperfect beauty of a hand-printed fabric over the sterile uniformity of a machine-printed one. Choosing to support an artisan community over an automated factory. Choosing a garment that carries within its fibres the knowledge and skill of generations.

This is the choice that Daughters of India asks you to make. Not with guilt or obligation, but with the understanding that beauty and meaning are inseparable, and that the most beautiful cloth in the world is made where it has always been made ~ in the hands of Rajasthan's artisans, under the desert sun.


Shipping & Returns

Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted by artisan communities in India, supporting women's empowerment and preserving ancient textile traditions.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Australia International
Standard 3–7 days 5–10 days
Express 1–5 days 2–5 days


You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • To arrange your return, contact us at hello@daughtersofindia.net. We recommend using a trackable shipping service.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

Shipping & Returns

Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted by artisan communities in India, supporting women's empowerment and preserving ancient textile traditions.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Australia International
Standard 3–7 days 5–10 days
Express 1–5 days 2–5 days


You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • To arrange your return, contact us at hello@daughtersofindia.net. We recommend using a trackable shipping service.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

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