Patola saris are renowned for their colorful diversity, symbolic motifs and geometrical designs. Rendered in green, brown, red, orange, yellow, black and white, this sari is a prime example of one of the traditional Patan patola designs, the ‘Vohra Gaji’ — that received its moniker from being particularly patronised by the Bohra Muslim community. Patola (plural, singular patolu) are double ikat woven fine-silk saris. Patan in north Gujarat is the most famous centre for patola-weaving in India, where they are traditionally woven by the Salvi community. Alongside requiring much skill, producing patola is also a time consuming affair — taking anywhere from six months to a year to make one sari. An extremely difficult techical process in which both the warp and the weft are resist-dyed prior to weaving, patola are very expensive — and were historically therefore worn only by royalty, the aristocracy, the elite Brahmin castes, and Jain and Bohra merchants.
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