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 / Resources / Kasuti Embroidery - Karnataka / Stitches

.

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 Resource

Kasuti Embroidery - Karnataka

Needle Handwork
by
Smt. Usha Pawar and Sanmati Hosure
IDC, IIT Bombay
Stitches
 
  • Printer-friendly version

In olden times, women spare their leisure time for weaving and embroidery skills. Karnataka is famous for the silk industry. The discarded silk threads were used for Kasuti embroidery. The uniqueness of this embroidery is that the patterns are stitched without knots at starting or ending points. The reason behind this is that a pattern should look alike on both sides of the cloth. Different types of stitches are used to obtain the desired pattern. There are four types of stitches namely, Gavanti, Murgi, Negi and Menthi.


Gavanti:
It is the most common stitch. It is the double running stitch used for making vertical, horizontal and diagonal lines. The patterns are mostly geometrical. The designs appear to be identical on both sides of the fabric. 


Murgi:
It is a zigzag stitch and it appears like the steps of a ladder. The distance between the stitches remains the same as the stitches are of uniform size. The work in Murgi stitches is neat and tidy; hence the design appears the same on the right and wrong sides of the material.


Negi:
It is an ordinary running stitch. Basically, it goes from right to left. This stitch is used for larger designs. The design created resembles woven patterns. It is worked in long and short straight lines hence the wrong and right sides of the design are not appearing identical.  


Menthi:
It is a cross stitch resembling fenugreek seeds. It had generally a heavy appearance so it is used for filling purposes. This stitch is not much used as a large amount of thread is required. It is commonly used to cover up the background areas of the designs.

col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4
col-sm-4

‹ › ×

    • Introduction
    • Smt. Usha Pawar
    • Tools and Raw Materials
    • Stitches
    • Products
    • Video
    • Downloads
    • Contact Details
    • Credits

    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