Thursday 19 September 2013

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Biography

Source (Google.com.pk)
Well Most of the women will feel joy to wear those Bridal designer wear to look different from the mass public in the occasions or parties. No a days Designer dress have spread their hands on all dress designs. Designs people started manufacturing the Indian look traditional dress and hence gets popular not only in India but also overseas. Indian people staying overseas always prefer to wear sarees when any Indian function is organized or any Indian Invitation comes. Bridal designs wear available in variety of range,designs, and patterns. Different fabric material is used for different shade of designs.Like heavy zari work designs are made on the crepe or pure silk fabric. Embroidery,semi precious diamond and beaded are some of the zari work which are done on the fabric. You wil find sarees by season,sarees by occasion,and sarees by fabric. Before jumping to buy those saree online or form the retail store first make a list of things like for which season,occasion,and budget you need that saree. This will help to select a perfect match with perfect fits of sarees and hence will make you more charm.
There are huge number of website online which are selling the sarees now a days. Many website offers huge sale or lucky draw during festival season. Like the one you are aware about the homeshop18 , Now a days diwali danteras and many such Indian function are near. Hence homehop18 has launch a offer ,Big shop big pau offer. It means if you shop big then you will be the winner to take away many gifts item like car,tv,refrigerator. and many such attractive gift prize. Online shopping website are offering all the details that you want to know about the particular designs which you select on the website. Select those website in which percentage of the repeated cleint are more. Like you can read the review of the people who has buyed that sarees. Read those reaview and than take the decision before buying. Do not just see the looks of sarees which the smart models are woring. Just read what fabric is that,what works has been done on that. Then go to the decision to take to buy the saree. Online saree portal are becoming day by day popular. As when some one likes those saree and they re order again. And mouth publicity also the main factor of becoming those website popular.


Patola means “Queen of Silks”. The Patola Silk Sarees are one of the finest varieties of handloom silk saree from Gujarat. Patola sarees are woven with great clarity and precision. They are well known all over the world for their highly delicate patterns. These sarees are woven by master weavers on a special type of silk called ‘Patola Silk’. Geometric designs with folk motifs and flaming colors are characteristic features of Patola sarees. Each Patola saree reflects the skill and imagination of the weaver and is exclusive by nature. Patan and Surat are famous destinations of Patola sarees. Patan, the place in Gujarat, is well known for its Patola saree.The art of Patola sarees flourished with the arrival and settlement of Salvi weavers from Karnataka and Maharashtra in Patan under the patronage of royal Solanki Rajputs and affluent people of Gujarat. This dates back to the 12th century. The historical evidences determine that Patola sarees have been made since at least the thirteenth century and have always had aristocratic or ritualistic associations. The walls of some south Indian temples, such as at Mattancheri (Kerala) and Padmanabhapuram (southern Tamil Nadu) contain eighteenth-century depictions of Patola designs.Patola sarees have evolved from the days of sultanate reign and era of royals and confined to Gujarat for an acclaiming stature as one of the finest pieces of fabric and works of art. Gujarat is believed to have exported Patola sarees to South-East Asia since at least the fourteenth century. The later development and expansion of Patola weaving is also traced in the historical evidences. This depicts that after the fall of Solanki dynasty, the wealthy Gujarati merchants patronized the Salvis. Gradually the Patola sarees became a status symbol with Gujarati girls and became an essential part of the women closet. 
A sari or saree is a strip of unstitched cloth, worn by women, ranging from four to nine yards in length that is draped over the body in various styles which is native to the Indian Subcontinent.The word sari is derived from Sanskrit शाटी śāṭī which means 'strip of cloth' and शाडी śāḍī or साडी sāḍī in Prakrit, and which was corrupted to sāṛī in Hindi.The word 'Sattika' is mentioned as describing women's attire in ancient India in Buddhist Jain literature called Jatakas. This could be equivalent to modern day 'Sari'. The term for female bodice, the choli is derived from another ruling clan from ancient Tamil nadu, the Cholas. Rajatarangini (meaning the 'river of kings'), a tenth-century literary work by Kalhana, states that the Choli from the Deccan was introduced under the royal order in Kashmir. The concept of Pallava, the end piece in the sari, originated during the Pallavas period and named after the Pallavas, another ruling clan of Ancient Tamilakam.
It is popular in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Burma, Malaysia, and Singapore. The most common style is for the sari to be wrapped around the waist, with one end then draped over the shoulder, baring the midriff.
The sari is usually worn over a petticoat (called lahaṅgā or lehenga in the north; langa, pavada, or pavadai in the south; chaniyo, parkar, ghaghra, or ghagaro in the west; and shaya in eastern India), with a blouse known as a choli or ravika forming the upper garment. The blouse has short sleeves and a low neck and is usually cropped at the midriff, and as such is particularly well-suited for wear in the sultry South Asian summers. Cholis may be backless or of a halter neck style. These are usually more dressy, with plenty of embellishments such as mirrors or embroidery, and may be worn on special occasions. Women in the armed forces, when wearing a sari uniform, don a short-sleeved shirt tucked in at the waist. The sari developed as a garment of its own in both South and North India at around the same time, and is in popular culture an epitome of Indian culture.The sari signified the grace of Indian women adequately displaying the curves at the right places.It is generally accepted that wrapped sari-like garments for lower body and sometimes shawls or scarf like garment called 'uttariya' for upper body, have been worn by Indian women for a long time, and that they have been worn in their current form for hundreds of years. In ancient couture the lower garment was called 'nivi' or 'nivi bandha', while the upper body was mostly left bare. The works of Kalidasa mentions 'Kurpasika' a form of tight fitting breast band that simply covered the breasts. It was also sometimes referred to as 'Uttarasanga' or 'Stanapatta'.The tightly fitted, short blouse worn under a sari is a choli. Choli evolved as a form of clothing in the 10th century AD, and the first cholis were only front covering; the back was always bare but covered with end of saris pallu. Bodices of this type are still common in the state of Rajasthan.
In South India and especially in Kerala, women from most communities wore only the sari and exposed the upper part of the body till the middle of the 20th century. Poetic references from works like Silappadikaram indicate that during the Sangam period in ancient Tamil Nadu, a single piece of clothing served as both lower garment and head covering, leaving the midriff completely uncovered. Similar styles of the sari are recorded paintings by Raja Ravi Varma in Kerala. By the mid 19th century, though, bare breasted styles of the sari faced social revaluation and led to the Upper cloth controversy in the princely state of Travancore (now part of the state of Kerala) and the styles declined rapidly within the next half a century.

In ancient India, although women wore saris that bared the midriff, the Dharmasastra writers stated that women should be dressed such that the navel would never become visible. By which for some time the navel exposure became a taboo and the navel was concealed.

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

Sarees Design Langa Voni Davani Voni Designs Township PHoto Voni Sarees Designs Blouse For Kids Photo

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