Friday 5 April 2013

How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images

How To Sewing Saree Blouse

Source: (Google.com.pk)

Gaya yang terumum untuk sari adalah untuk sarinya dibalut di keliling pinggang, dengan hujung longgar dipakai ke atas bahu, mendedahkan perut.[1] Meskipun, sari dapat ditabirkan dalam berlainan gaya, walaupun sesetengah gaya memerlukan sari dengan panjang atau bentuk khusus. Penyelidik sari dan ahli antropologi budaya Perancis, Chantal Boulanger, menkategorikan tabiran sari dengan keluarga berikut:[8]
Nivi – gaya terdahulunya dipakai di Andhra Pradesh; selain dari nivi moden, adanya juga kaccha nivi, di mana pleats melalui kaki dan disisipkan ke pinggang di belakang. Ini membenarkan gerakan mudah ketika menutup kaki.
Gaya Bengal dan Oriya.
Gujarat – gaya ini berlainan dari 'nivi hanya pada cara yang hujung longgar diuruskan: dalam gaya ini , hujung longgar ditabir ke atas bahu kanan daripada di kiri, dan juga ditabir belakang ke hadapan daripada cara yang sebaliknya.
Maharashtrian/kashta; This drape (front and back) adalah sangat mirip dengan yang pada dhoti Maharashtra lelaki. Pusat sari (dipegang dari segi panjang) diletakkan di belakang pusat, yang hujungnya dibawa ke hadapan dan diikat secara terkawal, kemudian dua hujung dibalut di keliling kaki. Apabila dipakai sebagai sari, suatu kain panjang lebih digunakan dan hujungnya oleh itu dilalui ke atas bahu-bahu dan bahagian atas badan. Mereka secara asas dipakai oleh wanita Brahmin dari Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh dan Tamil Nadu.
Bangsa Dravid – tabiran sari dipakai di Tamil Nadu; banyak mencirikan pinkosu, atau roset lipatan kain, di pinggang.
Gaya Madisaara – Tabiran ini adalah kebiasaan wanita Brahmin dari Tamil Nadu dan Kerala
Kodagu style – Tabiran ini dihadkan pada wanita yang datang dari daerah Kodagu dari Karnataka. Dalam gaya ini, ikatan kain dicipta di belakang, daripada dari hadapan. Hujung longgar sari ditabir belakang-ke-hadapan ke atas bahu kanan, dan dipinkan ke bahagian tertinggal sari.
Gond – gaya sari didapati di banyak bahagian India Tenagh. Kainnya pertama ditabirkan ke atas bahu kiri, kemudian diaturkan untuk menutup badan.
Sari dua keping, atau mundum neryathum, dipakai di Kerala. Biasanya diperbuat dari kapas unbleached dan dihiaskan dengan jalur dan/atau sempadan berwarna emas.
Gaya puak – sering dikawal dengan mengikat mereka secara ketat di sepanjang dada, menutupi dada.
Gaya nivi adalah gaya sari yang termasyhur hari ini. (Dongerkerry K. S. 1959).[9]
Tabiran nivi bermula dengan satu hujung sari disisip ke dalam selendang pinggang pada petticoat. Kainnya dibalut di keliling bahagian bawah badan sekali, kemudian dikumpul tangan ke dalam ikatan kain seimbang hanya di bawah pusat perut. Ikatan kain juga disisip ke dalam selendang pinggang petticoat.[9] Mereka mencipta suatu kesan yang lemah lembut dan berhiasan yang para penyajak telah menyamakan dengan kuntum-kuntum bunga.[9]
Selepas satu lagi pusingan di keliling pinggang, hujung longgar ditabirkan ke atas bahu.[9] Hujung longgar digelarkan pallu atau pallav. Ia ditabir secara pepenjuru di hadapan torso. Ia dipakai di sepanjang pinggul kanan ke atas bahu kiri, separuhnya mendedahkan bahagian torso dekat pinggang.[9] Pusat perut dapat didedahkan atau ditutupi oleh pemakai dengan adjusting pallu, terpulang pada pemuatan kemasyarakatan di mana sari dipakai. Hujung panjang pallu digantung dari belakang bahu sering dihiaskan secara teliti. Pallav dapat sama ada dibiarkan bergantung bebas, disisipkan di pinggang, digunakan untuk menutup kepala, atau hanya digunakan untuk menutup leher, dengan mentabirkannya di sepanjang bahu kanan juga. Sesetengah gaya nivi dipakai dengna pallu ditabirkan dari belakang terhadap ke hadapan.
Sari Nivi dimasyhurkan melalui lukisan Raja Ravi Varma.[10] dengan modifying sari Indian selatan digelarkan mundum neriyathum. Dalam salah satu lukisannya subbenua India telah ditunjukkan sebagai seorang ibu memakai nivi saree mengalir.[10]

How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images
How To Sewing Saree Blouse Pictures Photos Pics Images

Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images

Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Definition

Source: (Google.com.pk)

Perkataan 'sari' berpunca dari perkataan Prakrit 'sattika' seperti disebutkan dalam sastera agama Jain dan Buddha awal.[2]
Sejarah pakaian India dapat mengesan sari kembali ke Tamadun Lembah Indus, yang berkembang sewaktu 2800-1800 SM di sekitar bahagian barat Subbenua India.[1] Gambaran terawal dikenali pada sari di subbenua India adalah sebuah patung paderi lembah Indus memakai tabir.[1]
Sajak Tamil silam, seperti Silappadhikaram dan Kadambari oleh Banabhatta, menjelaskan wanita dalam tabiran atau sari indah.[3] Dalam tradisi India purba dan Natya Shastra (sebuah perjanjian India silam menjelaskan tarian dan pakaian silam), pusat Makhluk Tinggi dianggapkan sumber hidup dan daya cipta, oleh itu bahagian torso dekat pinggang dintinggalkan terdedah dengan sari.[4]
Sesetengah sejarawan mempercayai bahawa dhoti lelaki, yang pakaian tabirnya tertua India, adalah pelopor sari. Mereka berkata bahawa hingga abad ke-14, dhoti telah dipakai oleh lelaki dan wanita.[5]
Seni arca dari sekolah Gandhara, Mathura dan Gupta (abad 1-ke-6 AM) menunjukkan dewi-dewi dan para penari memakai apanya kelihatan balutan dhoti, dalam versi "ekor ikan" yang meliputi kakai secara longgar dan kemudian mengalir ke suatu tabiran berhaisan yang panjang di hadapan kaki. Tiada badan baju telah ditunjuk.[6]
Sumber-sumber lain mengatakan pakaian seharian terdiri dari dhoti atau lungi (sarong), digabung dengan suatu selendang dada atau balutan yang dapat digunakan untuk menutup bahagian atas badan atau kepala. Kerala mundum neryathum dua keping (mundu, dhoti atau sarong, neryath, iaitu selendang, dalam Malayalam) adalah pengekalan gaya pakaian India silam, sari satu keping atau inovasi moden, dicipta dengan menggabungkan dua keping mundum neryathum.[7]
Ia secara umum diterima bahawa balutan pakaian semacam sari, selendang, dan tudung telah dipakai oleh wanita India untuk masa yang lama, dan bahawa mereka dipakai pada bentuk kininya selama beratus-ratus tahun.
Satu sudut kontroversi khusus adalah sejarah choli, atau balus sari, dan petticoat. Sesetengah penyelidik menyatakan bahawa ini tidak diketahui sebelum ketibaan British di India, dan bahawa mereka diperkenalkan untuk memuaskan gagasan zaman Victoria pada pakaian sopan. Terdahulunya, wanita hanya memakai satu tabiran kain dan secara kasual mendedahkan badan dan dada. Para sejarawan lain menunjukkan pada tekstual mendalam dan bukti kesenian untuk pelbagai bentuk selendang dada dan selendang bahagian atas badan.
Di Kerala dan Tamil Nadu, ia sudah tentu didokumenkan bahawa wanita dari banyak masyarakat memakai hanya sari dan mendedahkan bahagian atas badan hingga kurun ke-20.[5] Rujukan sajak dari karya-karya seperti Shilappadikaram menandakan bahawa sewaktu zaman sangam di Tamil Nadu purba, sehelai pakaian telah berkhidmat sebagai pakaian penutupan bahagian bawah dan penutup kepala, meninggalkan dada dan bahagian bahagian torso dekat pinggang keseluruhannya tidak ditutup.[3] Di Kerala ada banyak rujukan pada wanita mendedah dada,[5] termasuk banyak gambar oleh Raja Ravi Varma. Walaupun ke hari ini, wanita dalam sesetengah kawasan perkampungan tidak memakai choli.

Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Sarees Blouse Designs Pictures Photos Pics Images

Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images

Sarees With Blouses Definition

Source:- Google.com.pk

Because of the harsh extremes in temperature on the Indian Subcontinent, the sari fills a practical role as well as a decorative one. It is not only warming in winter and cooling in summer, but its loose-fitting tailoring is preferred by women who must be free to move as their duties require. For this reason, it is the costume of choice of air hostesses on Air India.[62] This led to a professional style of draping a sari which is referred to Air-Hostess style sari. An air hostess style sari is tied in just the same way as a normal sari except that the pleats are held together quite nicely with the help of pins. A bordered sari will be just perfect for an Air-Hostess style drape where the pallu is heavily pleated and pinned on the shoulder. Even the vertical pleats that are tucked at the navel are severely pleated and pressed. Same goes for the pallu pleats that are pinned at the shoulder. To get the perfect ‘Air-hostess’ a complimentary U-shaped blouse that covers the upper body completely is worn which gives a very elegant and formal look. Mastering the ‘Air-hostess’ style drape helps to create the desired impact in a formal setting like an interview or a conference.[63][64]
Saris are worn as uniforms by the female hotel staff of many five star luxury hotels in India as symbol of culture. Recently in a makeover design, Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces, decided the welcoming staff at the group's Luxury Hotels would be draped in the rich colours and designs of the Banarasi six yards. The new saris were unveiled at the Taj property in Mumbai. It will be subsequently replicated at all 10 Luxury Hotels of the group across the country for duty managers and front office staff. Taj had adopted three villages in Varanasi and employed 25 master weavers there for the project. The vision finally took shape after 14 months, once the weavers had a good work environment, understood the designs and fine-tuned the motifs.[65][66][67][68][69][70]
Similarly, the female politicians of India wear the sari in a professional manner. The women of Nehru–Gandhi family like Indira Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi wear the special blouse for the campaign trail which is longer than usually and is tucked in to prevent any midriff show while waving to the crowds.Stylist Prasad Bidapa has to say, “I think Sonia Gandhi is the country's most stylish politician. But that's because she's inherited the best collection of saris from her mother-in-law. I'm also happy that she supports the Indian handloom industry with her selection.” BJP politician Sushma Swaraj maintains her prim housewife look with a pinned-up pallu while general secretary of AIADMK Jayalalithaa wears her saris like a suit of armour.[71]
[edit]Bangladesh

Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images
Sarees With Blouses Pictures Photos Pics Images

Thursday 4 April 2013

Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images

Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Definition

Source:- Google.com.pk

The word sari is derived from Sanskrit शाटी śāṭī[5] which means 'strip of cloth'[6] and शाडी śāḍī or साडी sāḍī in Prakrit, and which was corrupted to sāṛī in Hindi.[7] The word 'Sattika' is mentioned as describing women's attire in ancient India in Buddhist Jain literature called Jatakas.[8] This could be equivalent to modern day 'Sari'.[8]
In the history of Indian clothing the sari is traced back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, which flourished during 2800–1800 BC around the western part of the Indian subcontinent.[2][3][4] The earliest known depiction of the sari in the Indian subcontinent is the statue of an Indus Valley priest wearing a drape.[2][3][4]
Ancient Tamil poetry, such as the Silappadhikaram and the Sanskrit work, Kadambari by Banabhatta, describes women in exquisite drapery or sari.[12] The ancient stone inscription from Gangaikonda Cholapuram in old Tamil scripts has a reference to hand weaving.[9] In ancient Indian tradition and the Natya Shastra (an ancient Indian treatise describing ancient dance and costumes), the navel of the Supreme Being is considered to be the source of life and creativity, hence the midriff is to be left bare by the sari.[13][14]
Sculptures from the Gandhara, Mathura and Gupta schools (1st–6th century AD) show goddesses and dancers wearing what appears to be a dhoti wrap, in the "fishtail" version which covers the legs loosely and then flows into a long, decorative drape in front of the legs. No bodices are shown.[2]
Other sources say that everyday costume consisted of a dhoti or lungi (sarong), combined with a breast band called 'Kurpasika' or 'Stanapatta' and occasionally a wrap called 'Uttariya' that could at times be used to cover the upper body or head.[8] The two-piece Kerala mundum neryathum (mundu, a dhoti or sarong, neryath, a shawl, in Malayalam) is a survival of ancient Indian clothing styles. The one-piece sari is a modern innovation, created by combining the two pieces of the mundum neryathum.[3][4][15]
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.[8] The works of Kalidasa mentions 'Kurpasika' a form of tight fitting breast band that simply covered the breasts.[8] It was also sometimes referred to as 'Uttarasanga' or 'Stanapatta'.[8]
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.[16]
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.[3][4] 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.[12] 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.[17][18] By which for some time the navel exposure became a taboo and the navel was concealed.[19]

Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Indian Saree Blouse Patterns Pictures Photos Pics Images
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...