
Dusty-Pink Pure Pashmina Sozni Outline Hand-Embroidered Jamawar Kani Border Shawl With Fringe
Dry clean recommended. Store with natural cedar or neem leaves. Avoid direct sunlight and moisture.
Description
Dusty pink, the colour of a Kashmiri dawn caught in wool finer than breath. This shawl is woven from pure Pashmina, the storied fibre combed from the undercoat of Changthangi goats who graze the high-altitude plains of Ladakh, and it carries within its weave two of Kashmir's most demanding textile traditions. The border is worked in the Kani technique, where tiny wooden spools called kanis interlace supplementary wefts to build the dense, jewel-like Jamawar patterns that once adorned Mughal courts. Across the body, Sozni needle-embroidery traces a delicate outline motif, each stitch placed by hand with the particular restraint that distinguishes this quieter school of Kashmiri embroidery from its more elaborate counterparts. The resulting textile is at once substantial and gossamer, its muted rose deepened by the natural lustre of Pashmina, and its fringe falling with the unhurried grace that only handcrafted cloth possesses. Drape it over formal silk at a winter wedding, or draw it across the shoulders on a cool evening when something beautiful is simply required.
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Behind this piece
This shawl is a conversation between two of Kashmir's most demanding crafts. The field is pure Pashmina, combed from the underbelly of Changthangi goats at Ladakhi altitudes where the cold dictates fineness. Across it, Sozni needlework traces delicate outlines in the tradition that has distinguished Kashmiri embroidery since the Mughal court. The border is woven, not printed, in the Kani manner, its Jamawar geometry built thread by thread on a special loom using wooden twill sticks. Dusty pink softens the whole, giving an heirloom technique a contemporary restraint.
How to style
Drape this shawl over an ivory Chanderi kurta set for a winter wedding reception and let the Kani border frame the silhouette at the hem. For diaspora occasions, layer it over a tailored cream silk blouse with wide-leg trousers and finish with uncut polki drop earrings. On cooler mornings, fold it in thirds and wear it as a stole over a cashmere turtleneck in camel or oat, with tan leather Derby shoes. The dusty-pink ground reads as a neutral, making it generous across skin tones and occasion registers.
Fabric & care
Pashmina at this fineness requires patience. Hand wash alone, in cool water with a small amount of mild, pH-neutral shampoo, never detergent. Support the full weight of the wet shawl as you lift it; never wring or twist. Press gently between two clean white towels and reshape flat to dry away from direct sun. Once fully dry, fold along the original lines with a strip of acid-free tissue inside each fold. Store flat in a breathable cotton bag with dried neem leaves to discourage moths. Ironed correctly, this shawl will outlast the generation that buys it.
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