The Asian Age

A BLANKET OF TRADITIONS

A Mumbai resident’s desire to financiall­y uplift the women in her village, has revitalise­d the traditiona­l practice of weaving godhadis, employing 100 women from six villages in Maharashtr­a

- VANESSA VIEGAS

Mumbai resident Komal Machindar, who originally hails from Maharashtr­a’s Satara district, has always wanted to do something for the women in her village who couldn’t venture out of their homes to pursue jobs, bound by cultural and familial restrictio­ns. Like most women in her village, Komal’s late grandmothe­r weaved godhadis or quilts at home just as it was traditiona­lly done for generation­s. “I still use the godhadi my granny made for me when I was younger. I can’t part with it,” she shares. So, it wasn’t long before she joined the dots and mobilised these women from the villages to revive the traditiona­l practice of godhadi making. What started with five women from one village in Satara has spread to other six villages — Nagthane, Ozarde, Khandala, Kumthe — girdling 100 women today.

With the help of her designer sister Sheetal Salgaonkar and her cousin brother Nikhil Kenjale, who lives in

K ore ga on,

Satara, Komal laid the foundation of her enterprise, which is now formally called Ornate Quilts. “I started around February 2018 when we were deciding on how to take this forward. So we visited some villages and started with five women from the village who were known to Nikhil,” she says. In this period, Komal quit her job for nine months at L& T

Info Tech. “Last January, I resigned and started working on this and was called back by my boss in November. I started working again because then I didn’t have to worry about the capital,” she shares.

The oldest lady who works at Ornate Quilts is a 92- year old granny from Ozarde village. “Suddenly, her life has changed. Since the younger women in the village weren’t able to do quilting as effectivel­y as her, they all look upto her for training,” informs the entreprene­ur.

There were many other catalysts along the way that prompted Komal to scale her business further, starting with a phone call from a friend who wanted to buy her quilts. “That’s when

I actually started to see this as a business model. Soon after that, I applied to the Kala Ghoda Festival 2019 and we were immediatel­y selected,” she recalls. The women at Kala Ghoda then referred her to many other people along the way. “We did our first exhibition at Pune’s Bhimthadi Jatra where we received a thunderous response. After that we felt encouraged and wanted to do more. Sharad Pawar’s family, who runs the carnival, also purchased our quilts. I am now getting calls from Gram Panchayats and many other villages that have bachat gats,” says Komal.

Her business is certainly burgeoning and the women have a steady source of income, having made 300 quilts in the last two months alone. While there is no top limit on the number of quilts each lady makes, one doublebed quilt can take about eight or nine days to make, since the women have to

The oldest artisan who works at Ornate Quilts is a 92- year old granny from Ozarde village in Wai taluka

make it in their free time. “When the quilt is ready, I also take photograph­s of each of the artisans with the quilt and send it to my clients and customers. So they know exactly who is making these quilts for them,” she tells.

Favourable government initiative­s and a frequent transport system have also contribute­d to making this a well- oiled system. “Everything has become very easy. The raw material suppliers connect with me on WhatsApp. Once I’ve met them, they send me the design on WhatsApp and the transactio­ns are done through online payments.”

Komal provides all the raw materials to the women artisans and then collects it from them once it is ready. Another idea she thought about later on was to collect handloom cotton from every state in the country, for which Komal actually pounds pavements to find the right material. “So I don’t use the regular material, only

handloom cotton. So far, I’ve connected with suppliers from three states – Jaipur, Gujarat and places in the South. What I want is to revive the handloom experience and bring handloom cotton to everybody’s notice by connecting places through threads,” she elucidates.

Her godhadis are typically three or four layers thick, and the cloth that is used in the middle layer is a handloom cotton that Komal procures from Ichalkaran­ji village, ahead of Satara, she shares. The Single bed godhadi is priced at ` 3000, whereas a king size godhadi, which is 110X110 inches, is priced at ` 8000.

“This insulation gives the godhadi a peculiar quality – in the colder seasons you feel warm and during warmer seasons you feel pleasant. Another benefit is that all the patients who have respirator­y problems should use it since godhadis do not trap dust like normal blankets do ,” she concludes.

“I want is to revive the handloom experience and bring handloom cotton to everybody’s notice by connecting places through threads” — KOMAL MACHINDAR

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India