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Haute by Hand

The Morning Standard

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March 15, 2026

India's everyday craft inheritances are re-scripted and marketed as pricey objets d'art in the global market

- MANISH MISHRA

Indian craft, for centuries, has existed quietly within the rhythm of daily life-functional, intuitive and deeply embedded in community. But now what is changing is not the craft itself, but the way it is recast. India's most unassuming inheritances are today's global luxuries. The dull gleam of original pital pooja thalis of Moradabad, once stacked in ancestral kitchens, embellish Michelin-starred tables in Copenhagen and California. Hand-hammered copper lotas are styled as wellness mascots abroad; brass urlis from India's South show off their antique perfection in boutique hotel lobbies of Marrakech and Melbourne. Pashmina shawls from Kashmir, jaamdaani from Bengal, kanjeevaram silks from Tamil Nadu, and patola from Gujarat are no longer just heirlooms-they are investment pieces showcased in Paris showrooms and New York concept stores. The attar of Kannauj, once tucked into wedding trousseaus, is bottled as artisanal fragrances which compete with European perfume houses. What was once desi domestic is now design-forward, sustainably sourced, and globally coveted.

Craft crusader, curator and textiles revivalist Lavina Baldota believes that the shift lies largely in language and perception. "The pottery in villages, made by kumhars, was part of everyday life and never positioned as luxury," she says.

Processes that were always slow are suddenly being relabelled "slow luxury," with time, patience and skill being framed as virtues. Designers are increasingly choosing to retain original craft vocabularies over translating them into palatable global terms. Guldasta remains Guldasta. Baans stays Baans.

"The names carry provenance.

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