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Hand made paper mache
 

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Code: pm340
Material : Papermache
Mass Weight : 1.5kg (3.41 lbs)
Shipping Weight : 3kg (6.82 lbs)
Quantity Available - 1
Price: $58.00
Sale : $52.20
You Save: 10%
 

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 Product Feature
 
* Size: Height 9" ,Dia-3.75inches
* Made in paper mache and painted by hand.

* Made in Sterling Silver
* Made by the artisans of Jaipur, Rajasthan.
* Shipped in 48 hours from Gurgaon, a suburb of New Delhi, India
 
 Product Description
 

Paper mache handmade gifts from Kashmir, in India. Quality workmanship of Kashmiri craftsmen can be seen in the richly textured paintings. The designs used in paper mache <i>naqashi are very intricate and their application requires a great deal of skill and accuracy. The patterns are painted free hand. The naqash draws from the reeservoir of patterns and motifs in his memory. The chosen design is first outlined in a light color and the spaces outlining flower or the other forms which are to be filled with color are initially painted white. After this, flower, birds and other motifs are painted.Paper Mache products for gifts and decoration, handmade by craftsmen of Kashmir in India. Order these beautiful and unique Christmas decorations in bulk, in time for the holiday season. The creation of a papier-mache object can be divided into two distinct categories, the Sakhtsazi (making the object) and the Naqashi (painting the surface). The form is molded using a base shape. This form is made of the pulp of paper, cloth, rice straw and copper sulphate pulp. The form is then coated with gypsum and glue, followed by thin tissue paper. On drying they are rubbed, smoothened and burnished. The form is then given the base color. The colors for painting designs on the surface are obtained by grinding and soaking various vegetable mineral dyes in pigment or stone form. The object is then sandpapered and burnished, and finally painted with several coats of a varnish made of linseed oil and pine resin. Papier-mâché, has become a sophisticated art, with even more attractive results, by using real gold and silver paint and intricate decorations. The final product is a beautiful art work that cannot be called a creation of one artist. It travels many pairs of talented hands before reaching a table or a mantel. The Mughals and the Europeans were the great admirers of this craft.
 

 Our Customers' Views
 

 •  "The packet has been delivered this morning , with all ok , no problem with customs or DHL - My mother Orianna she\'s enthusiast as me with your product quality - Thank you for the mirror gift - Best Wishes for a better 2005 "
 • "I just wanted to let you all know that the items I bought as Christmas gifts were all well-recieved, especially the batik print. My step dad is an artist and he absolutely loved the print, and my mother loved the print also. The boxes and jewelry were also well liked, and I am reading the books myself, which I would like to buy more of someday. If you have any novels or short story collections about Jain families or written by Jain authors, please let me know? Thank you so much "
 •  "I cannot begin to thank you, and ShalinCraft enough for your wonderful products, and amazingly rapid service. I receive your items more quickly than I would from a mail order store in my own country, or even one in my own town!! I absolutely LOVE my new quilt and puppets. I will order from you again. I also look forward to visiting India sometime soon. Thank you again "
 

 Indian Culture
 

 India, a country with natural and cultural richness has a timeless heritage. Though moving with the world today, India still holds that mystic charm and that charm breathes in every art and craft coming from the hands of remote artists of her tribes and villages.

The rich and beautiful Indian culture started its journey long back with the journey of humanity on this land. It reflects their art of living, basic attitude towards life, talents and creativity. People from every walk of life, from the enormous estates to the remote and petit villages, everyone has continuously contributed to the heritage and richness of Indian culture.

The fact that India was invaded and ruled by various kings down the ages is already reflected by its impact on India culture. Among many other dynasties that ruled this rich country, Mughal dynasty was the one that left its most prominent and everlasting marks on its culture and people. Time to time our much-treasured culture shows impacts of being treated quite ruthlessly by the foreign invaders and rulers but with a steel strong base it was never completely shaken. It survived with a few ugly scars in form of ruined monuments in some part of the country. When we take a journey through the richness of Indian culture, we see how each form of art was given birth and nurtured with care, brought to its peak, held there firmly and down the ages modified and developed further.

Music, inspired perhaps by the whistles of the wind or the splash of the waves, chirping of the birds or may be falling of the rain, exists on this land since the existence of humanity. Many musical instruments and countless tunes (Ragas) are invented by them. They developed different Ragas for different times, seasons and feelings. Different regions developed their own style of singing, not following the ragas but their own folk tunes and taking the lyrics in their own language and themes from their day-to-day life.

Art its countless existing style date back to the ancient time, it was influenced by the desire for expression of how they interpreted their surroundings. Also what the women folk painted on the walls for ritual purposes or simply to decorate them, became art later. From the caves of the primitive folks, to the walls of the remote villages followed by the courts of the kings and now to the modern style, Indian culture has seen many faces of art in its journey since antiquity. In this field of Indian culture the Mughals contributed in abundance by promoting and patronizing the miniature artists. The British influence too contributed in the heritage of Indian art and culture by mingling the style of the two countries. What resulted was a pleasant blend that left its beautiful mark in the history of Indian culture.

Crafts this area has also existed since people started living on. this land. Experimenting with clay, wood, stone, metal and various other gifts of the nature, gave birth to craft. To make their living more comfortable initially utensils, wheels and many other useful items were discovered. And when this art was mastered, decorative items came into the scene. With the unmatched talent and creativity of those who moulded the base of the Indian culture, crafts soon reached its peak and modernized as well as developed from time to time.

Jewelry and cloth hold an honored place in the history of Indian culture. Jewellery made by stones, unfinished initially, has come a long way down the ages. Metal, gems and stones, jewelry has all existed since the existence of desire of wearing them. Clothes entered the scenario when the use of loom was discovered. Till then perhaps leaves played the role but since the discovery of loom, the Indian culture has seen tremendous experiments on it, with hands or with machine. The heavy zari clothes, silk fabric, unequalled quality of woolen fabric like toosh and pashmina extend richness to the Indian culture.

This is not all, for Indian culture in total is far from possible to write and next to impossible to know. But yet we are certain of its richness and beauty as well as its impressive journey till date. All Indians, if not of many other features of this country, are proud to be Indians when the world bows down to the unparalleled heritage Indian culture.

Hinduism, one of the most complex yet rich religion to follow and a faith existing since time immemorial, lives still but with a changed face. It can be understood not only by studying its evolution but also its everyday practice.

The recorded textual history of the Hindus can be said to begin with the Vedas. The term 'Vedas' does not denote any single book; it denotes an entire literature. The composition of the various texts, which constitute the Vedas, was spread over many centuries and over different localities, and is ascribed to many generations of poets and seers.

The Vedas, the origin of Hinduism, constitute the Hindu revelation and it is traditionally claimed that no human force was ever responsible for their creation. The Hindus believe that the Vedas have excised from the time of creation and will exist till eternity. Thevarious seers, it is believed, merely saw or discovered them with their special intuitive insight.

From generation to generation the Vedas have been transmitted through the oral tradition. That is why the traditional term for Vedas is shruti, which means recited and heard, not written and read. The first of the Vedas Rig Veda was composed between 1500 to 1000 BC. It is a collection of 1,028 hymns divided into ten sections. According to the concept of Hinduism derived from this literature, Dharma as a concept unites all of Hinduism and links its different parts into a single totality. Derived from the Sanskrit root 'dhr' (to bear, to support, to maintain) the word Dharma literally means that which is established by law, duty or custom.

The Brahmanas provide information on Hinduism as a practice or as a religion between the period of the Rig Veda and the Upnishads, the mystical and metaphysical dimension of Hinduism. The Brahmanas are lengthy prose text, which describe the major Vedic sacrifices. The philosophy given to Hinduism through these texts is that sacrifice is the fundamental to the universal process. The famous hymn of Brahmana celebrates the creation of the world by gods through dismembering of the cosmic giant, Purusa, the primeval male person, who in a typical Vedic paradox is both the performer and the victim of the sacrifice. This sacrifice is believed to have created the whole universe.

According to this philosophy of Hinduism, women are not regarded as having autonomous ritual activity, but they are necessarily associated with the rites performed by their husbands. Thus they have no personal destiny in life, and after death, the most virtuous of them are rewarded by being reunited with their husbands. To be reborn as a woman, even in a Brahmin family, is therefore in Hinduism another form of expiation of past sins.

Composed from the 6th century BD onwards the Upnishads develop the mystical and metaphysical dimension of Hinduism. The Upnishads, literally meaning 'sitting near' describes Hinduism as profound consciousness of the indivisible wholeness of life.

Inspired by the vision of God in all things and all things in God. According to that the belief of Hinduism lies in a cosmic spirit-infinite, creative, benevolent and deathless. It is the final transcendent truth -the real power behind all tangible forces. A vast ageless ocean of which everything that is experienced is a wave.

Facing acceptance as well as challenges, Hinduism with time has a subtly changed face but still matches closely to it's original descriptions and continues to charm and amaze the human race with its vastness and ambiguity.
 

 




 

 






 

 

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