Jump to navigation

  •  
  •  
  •  

  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos

Search form

Animation Design Communication Design Design Fundamentals Interaction Design Product Design Tools for Design Open Design
Home / Gallery / Tribal Lady Bottle Craft - Nagpur, Maharashtra

.

top unblocked 76 games free access unblocked games 76 now latest unblocked online games kays games unblocked access retro bowl unlimited play play retro bowl without block cool math brain games free school-friendly unblocked games yohoho io game online lesson guru hack and help play baseball bros unblocked classroom 6x games to play 76
Design Gallery

Tribal Lady Bottle Craft - Nagpur, Maharashtra

Utility Handicraft
by
Prof. Bibhudutta Baral and Srikanth Bellamkonda
NID, Bengaluru
  • Printer-friendly version
  • The bottle is the basic material on which a tribal lady's art is made.

  • The adhesive is used for sticking the M-SEAL onto the bottle.

  • There are two colours of M-SEAL, which are mixed and used to make this craft.

  • Acrylic colours are used to enhance the beauty of the tribal lady bottle art.

  • A glimpse of the M-SEAL.

  • The nameplate of the craft center.

  • A view of the workplace where the crafts are made.

  • Single-coloured bottle art made at the Creative Craft Center, Nagpur.

  • Double coloured bottle art.

  • The part of the bottle on which the art is created is displayed to present the technique.

  • Front and back views of the tribal lady bottle art.

  • The artisan Mrs. Vaishali H. Kawre and her husband runs Creative Craft at Nagpur.

The bottle is the basic material on which a tribal lady's art is made.

The adhesive is used for sticking the M-SEAL onto the bottle.

There are two colours of M-SEAL, which are mixed and used to make this craft.

Acrylic colours are used to enhance the beauty of the tribal lady bottle art.

A glimpse of the M-SEAL.

The nameplate of the craft center.

A view of the workplace where the crafts are made.

Single-coloured bottle art made at the Creative Craft Center, Nagpur.

Double coloured bottle art.

The part of the bottle on which the art is created is displayed to present the technique.

Front and back views of the tribal lady bottle art.

The artisan Mrs. Vaishali H. Kawre and her husband runs Creative Craft at Nagpur.

Nagpur is one of the largest cities in Maharashtra. Proposed as one of the smart cities of India, this region is a strong commercial and political center from the Vidarbha region. The place is also well known for its Nagpur oranges and hence known as the Orange City for its large-scale trading of the fruit widely cultivated in the region. Nagpur was previously known as 'Fanindrapura', a name derived from the word 'Fana' meaning hood of a cobra. The city has many well-known artists showing their creativity.

The tribal lady bottle is an innovative artwork made of a small sauce bottle and white M-SEAL. The product is exclusively developed to recognize the importance of our tribal communities who treasures age-old cultures and ethnicities. The bottle holds the shape of a tribal woman dressed in their tribal attire and jewelry. The reason behind the initiative is to exhibit their culture and, in this way, get more people aware of the Maharashtrian tribes. Mrs. Vaishali H. Kawre is an artisan from Nagpur who preserves this unique art. She is the owner cum trainer at the Creative Craft, Nagpur, who runs the art center for 22 years.

For more details:
https://www.dsource.in/resource/tribal-lady-bottle-craft-nagpur-maharashtra
 

The bottle is the basic material on which a tribal lady's art is made.

The adhesive is used for sticking the M-SEAL onto the bottle.

There are two colours of M-SEAL, which are mixed and used to make this craft.

Acrylic colours are used to enhance the beauty of the tribal lady bottle art.

A glimpse of the M-SEAL.

The nameplate of the craft center.

A view of the workplace where the crafts are made.

Single-coloured bottle art made at the Creative Craft Center, Nagpur.

Double coloured bottle art.

The part of the bottle on which the art is created is displayed to present the technique.

Front and back views of the tribal lady bottle art.

The artisan Mrs. Vaishali H. Kawre and her husband runs Creative Craft at Nagpur.


Creating Digital-learning Environment for Design



  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos
  • Animation Design
  • Communication Design
  • Design Fundamentals
  • Interaction Design
  • Product Design
  • Tools for Design
  • Open Design
  • Contribute to our Dsource
  • About
  • People
  • Events
  • Job@D'source
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Download App
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Indian Language
English Bangali Gujarati Hindi
Kannada Malayalam Marathi Punjabi
Sindhi Tamil Telugu Urdu