The Salwar/Churidar/Kameez Post – 1

A SHORT AND INCOMPLETE HISTORY OF THE CHUDIDAR, SALWAR, KAMEEZ ETC.

India’s links with West Asia date back to antiquity.  It’s significant influence on attire, particularly in North West India, is probably best documented during Mughal rule, especially from the 17th century onwards.  The paintings of this period depict patterned churidars, diaphonous overskirts or jamas (like an overcoat), bodices and dupattas, both for men and women. Also seen in pic 1. Full length ghaghras or skirts, however, also appear in these paintings. While influenced by West Asia, the dress is very much Indianised.

In early European paintings of India in the first half of the 19th century,  voluminous tunics are common as in pic 2. They are often paired with churidars or more commonly wide trousers.

Later paintings and photographs show a variety of styles. Essentially a three piece dress, endless variations were possible by changing the size and shape of the trousers or the tunic. Or even as the case may be the dupatta, which can be a simple stole or an enveloping shawl. The cloth used also varies, from very fine muslin to sturdier cottons and silks.

Pic 3 shows the “dancing girl” outfit we are used to which consisted of the chudidar and a tunic that was fitted at the top and flared at the bottom. The flared, skirt like nature of the tunic meant that muslin or chiffon would be used. Pic 4 is of the salwar in the early part of the 20th century, some of the more voluminous ones were influenced by Afghan clothing. As in this pic, the footwear of choice with the garment was the mojari.

The garment was also strongly identified with the Punjab (in many parts of India it is still known as the Punjabi suit). Allah Bux painted a number of traditional scenes incorporating women wearing the garment as in Pic 5. The side slit of the kameez (aka tunic), which eases movement, is optional.

By the 40s, the salwar kameez was beginning to be seen across India, partly due to the freedom movement, partly due to the movies. Pic 6 shows a style prevalent in the 40s: loose salwars and knee length flared kameez, its embellishments often mirroring western fashions. And possibly these are the early examples of synthetic dupattas.

The chudidar of course came into its own in the 60s when it was worn with an extremely fitted kameez and a diaphanous dupatta (pic 7), a style popularised by Sadhana in Arzoo. By this decade it was also increasingly pan Indian, at least in the movies.  A southern star like Jayalalitha (pic 8) would probably wear it in a movie to suggest a modern, educated girl.

The “matched set” became popular in the 80s. The set often came with printed dupattas as in pic 9.  The adaptation of handlooms for the garment also dates back to the 80s, with the revival of the sector woven cotton and silk sets became common. The chudidar was more popular but the salwar was also worn.

Post the 80s, there have been many variants of the garment and it is increasingly commonly worn all over the country.  There are plenty of examples between the early 80s to 2014 but we can all agree that the past few years have the anarkali (pic 10) as the mainstay. In a way linking us back to the 18th and 19th century:)

Posted in 18th century, 1940s, 1960s, 1980s, 19th century, churidar kameez, Contemporary, Culture, Early 20th Century, fashion, Girls, historical costume, Indian Dress, Indian fashion, Islamic Dress, Late 19th century, Mughal, Paintings, Pakistani Artists, Salwar Kameez, vintage fashion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

How to dress like a 1937 heroine

This post on ruffled blouses refers to Mukti (1937)* [X] [X].  The movie was a bit of a fashion influencer with Kanan’s crown braid and  Barua’s beret worn backwards apparently all the rage. It turns out the movie is on youtube. Not the best print but hey given how difficult it is to source 30s movies I will take any print! So without further ado bad screencaps deconstructing the fashions of 1937 as worn in Mukti.  Post which you can host your own 1930s themed party:)

In the movie, Prasanta (PC Barua) is a 1930s artist and bohemian in back to nature mode and his wife Chitra (Kanan Devi) belongs to the smart set of Kolkata aka the rich and Westernised elite.

First up ruffles were really on trend so if you want to do anything set in the latter half of the 1930s you can pretty much add a ruffle, either on the blouse or as a saree trim. And here are all the features of Kanan’s ruffle blouse.

In the film clip (about 00.03.00+), you can see that the sari is a chiffon/synthetic sort with a zari border (it is in fact quite rare to see “ethnic” coarse handlooms in many of the early movies-anyone with a bit of money was probably buying up chiffons and getting borders stitched or wearing translucent silks and cottons unless they were swadeshi sorts).  Perhaps given that she is upper class, Kanan wears the “modern” sari and not the traditional Bengali drape.

Kanan also has an armband (00.06.26), quite popular in the 1930s given that sleeveless or barely there sleeves were common.

Throughout the movie you will also note the lack of a bindi on Kanan.  Though sindoor is strongly associated with Bengali culture post marriage, the bindi is in fact not always seen in movies or even in vintage photographs on young women.

kanan9Here is a side view of Kanan’s crown braid.  Add to that chandelier earrings (a common feature throughout the movie) and a purse and some white heels and you were ready to party. Or at the very least shoot pool like Kanan (00.11.20+).

Barua’s persona, at least in this movie, is a little fey and eccentric. He is sort of a 1930s hipster, different for the sake of being different:).  At one point Chitra refers to his clothes as not being fit for a decent person. In his Misunderstood Artist in the City part he wears a tunic that looks like a silken poet shirt that morphs into a kurta and is worn with loose trousers. Also in the beginning some kind of long, silken jacket. Quite deshabille. I am curious, did he devise the costumes himself?

Just when you think you know EVERYTHING about the fashions of 1930s and are like 100% certain that no one ever wore long sleeved blouses with laces and all, along it comes! (see about the 00.29.00 and 00.35.00 mark).  I am going to put it down to Chitra raiding her mother’s closet. The sari seems consistent with the 1930s. Some kind of scalloped embroidery or applique on the border but no distinct pallu (the loose end of the sari).

Jokes apart, a quick look at 1930s movies shows that the full sleeved blouse does turn up now and then even though the decade is fairly liberated and sleeveless blouses were very common.

Barua really really liked scarves. At some point in the movie his character Prasanta runs off to Assam to live in a village. His attire gets more peasant like but the scarf never leaves his neck.

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Next up Kanan has a butterfly sleeve blouse with a  bit of a contrast trim (around the 0:56.40 mark). The sari is still light and translucent but looks more like a muslin Indian weave (you can also spot the pallu around the 0:59:09 mark).  To contrast with Prasanta’s “Indianness” and artistic temperament,  the smart set, including Chitra’s father, are in suits.

kananrufflesThis sleeve was pretty common in the 1930s too, here worn by Shanta Hublikar in the 1939 Manoos.

Around the 1.22.10 mark Kanan has something like a satin jacket worn over a sari, hard to get  a decent capture of it.  This is probably the only sari that Kanan wears that is a bordered Bengal cotton sari (see also 1.22.42).

A little later Kanan in another blouse that seems to have been fairly common in the late 30s and early 40s (I have seen it in old family photographs).  Kanan’s blouse is sleeveless with a  kind of – I don’t know what to call it – a cape or capelet collar? giving the illusion of a sleeve. The sari looks like a printed chiffon (1.23.41).

kanan32Kanan has a similar blouse in the 1938 movie, Street Singer.

A look at Barua’s famous cap! Every hipster in Calcutta was probably walking around with the cap worn backwards (thus anticipating the trucker cap:)). I can’t say whether it is a cap or a beret or even if its worn backwards with this damn print but I am going with beret worn backwards. (1.33.38). These scenes also have villagers in Indian clothing, both for the men and women.

kanan7And idk, I kind of  prefer Prasanta amusing Chitra by piling on all his hats (~00.07.00) 🙂

Last up at the climax (around 1.51.00), Kanan again opts for a long sleeved blouse but it doesn’t give off a Victorian vibe. It is more like a kurta or even a Chinese tunic with a side closure.  Kanan’s sari is again a chiffon/synthetic with a zari/gold border.

And with that you know everything about upper class fashions in Kolkata in 1937:)

*Subtitled version in 12 parts.

_*_

The movies of the 1920s and 30s are either no longer available or the prints are appalling. In fact a number of plots and tropes of Indian cinema are from these decades. And the fashion is also more fun, not so much in thrall to notions of respectability as at the turn of the century and not as formally beautiful as in the 1950s.  And there are so many interesting women in these decades too, and from what I can see fairly unapologetic about their lives to boot.

Posted in 1930s, Actor, Bengal, Cinema, Colonial, Culture, Early 20th Century, fashion, Hair, Indian Cinema, Indian Dress, Indian fashion, Indian men, Indian Singers, Indian Women, Movies, Sari, Sari Blouse, Singer, Vintage, Vintage Blouse, Vintage Dress, vintage fashion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

The Spiritual Post

The word spiritual is a rather loose rubric for this post which encompasses women philosophers, traditions of mysticism and wandering minstrels. None of these is entirely exclusive of the other yet they are different ways of pursuing knowledge or the divine.

But older still is the evidence of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, where Maitreyi has been addressed as Brahmavadini. The same Upanishad also mentions Gargi, who had participated in the philosophical conference convened by Janaka. We find a reference in the Mahabharata of Sulabha of the Upanishadic times, who was well versed in Sankhya and Yoga. So does Bhavabhuti vividly describe how Atreyi wandered from ashrama to ashrama in search of spiritual knowledge. [X]

Sunlight made visible
the whole length of a sky,
movement of wind,
leaf, flower, all six colours
on tree, bush and creeper:
all this
is the day’s worship. [X] [X]

Thera Sariputta replied that she should first become a bhikkhuni; so she became a bhikkhuni, by the name of Theri Kundalakesi. Within a few days, she became an arahat. [X]

There is a long tradition of women as philosophers or simply as having an affinity to a spiritual life or mysticism in India. Gargi is an example of the former, many of the medieval Bhakti poets like Meera, Banhinabai and Lal Dedh examples of the latter.  Further the ordaining of nuns was common to both Jainism and Buddhism. Like their male counterparts, many were laywomen who took to the faith, e.g. Kundalakesi.  Additionally see Sufism and women.  See also [X] And [X].


y8In the pictures today: 1) A profusion of 17th-18th century miniature paintings (see pics 13 that date back to 1680-1770) feature yoginis. Like most of the genre, they are often pictured wandering in a landscape, playing music, receiving visitors and the like. And very often they are pictured with animal companions, like dogs. A number of them also feature the swing which seems to be associated with yoginis in these paintings.

2) ) There are many movies based on the devotional saints, Others capture the tension between domestic life and the ascetic life. In the pics: a) Meera [X] b) the 1950 Jogan c) an episode from Bharat Ek Khoj with Mita Vashisht as Suvasini, a princess who is unable to marry Chandragupta Maurya and becomes a bhikkuni, and d) Anandamath where Geeta Bali plays Shanti, who dresses as a male ascetic to fight the British.

3) Deccan art, which has a slightly different take from its northern counterparts, also has the yogini has subject matter  [X] [X] [X]. Yogini with Mynah (1603-1604) is perhaps the most well known. The second pic is as recreated by Pushpamala (2000-2004).

“I have become a Baul. / I dance well, sing well. / I have even gotten a few disciples. / I have become a Baul. / I don’t do Baul dharma-karma. / Never gone to a guru. / I don’t like the sādhu [holy man] community. / Why? I am my own guru.”  [X]

4) Wandering minstrels, syncretic mystics, fakirs – the Bauls of Bengal have been extensively written about and documented. The peak of the tradition was in the 19th century/early 20th century.  A majority of practitioners are men but there are women too, some from the tradition [X] [X] and some who are drawn to its musical traditions [X] [X]. In popular iconography they appear as part of a couple as in pic 1 (the cover jacket of a study on Baul women), always in saffron and more often than not with the ektara. See also gift dolls. Similarly in Hindi cinema: Devdas, Pyaasa etc.But modern singers/practitioners appear solo as in pic 2. (also Kangalini Sufia).

As the pictures show, there is no definitive norm regarding the wearing of saffron. Saffron is however common, as is white. And dark clothing and other muted tones feature. Very rarely as in pic 2, there is little clothing.

Other paintings: Group of female ascetics; yogini; a Jaina nun; Three Ladies visiting a yogini; A Deccan yogini; yogini with disciples; Hat yogini; Mirabai.

For a brief review of women as gurus i.e. as spiritual teachers or precepts vs traditions of mysticism and bhakti see [X].

______*________

Mardi is away but she was in my thoughts when I wrote this post.

Posted in 17th century, 18th century, 19th century, 20th century, Ancient India, Culture, Early 20th Century, Hinduism, History, Indian Cinema, Indian Dress, Indian Singers, Indian Women, Late 19th century, Medieval India, miniature paintings, Paintings, vintage art | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

2014

newyeargreet

I have moved back closer to home in India. It will be awhile before I get back to Australia and I already miss it. But I look forward to a few – hopefully – new things this year.

Happy New Year, everyone!

Notes: This picture taken in Katoomba, I love the mountains.

Posted in Personal | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Hairstyles: 1951: Tamil Nadu

Hairstyles of the 1950s. 1951 to be precise, this is from a Diwali Special edition of Ananda Vikatan. Almost all styles you will note use flowers or jewels for ornamentation. Click to view full size.

The translations of the captions below.  Of the commonly used terms Kondai=bun, Rettai=double, Pinnal=braid, Jadai=hairstyle, seems to refer to types of plaits

1) Malayala Kondai (Kerala style)
2) Pushpa Valai (Flower Net)
3) Kodali Pushpa Kondai (i think kodali is an axe or spear but may be wrong).
4) Alli Chorukku (Wrap and tie)
5) Rettai Pushpa Pichoda (this seems to be a two plaits coiled and the flowers are added on, Pichoda refers to hair being put up)
6) Pirimanai Kondai (Pirimanai=ring)
7) Bob Thalai (that is a very liberal interpretation of a bob!)
8) Shurul Thazampu Jadai (Rolled/Curled flower in hair, thazhampu=screwpine/kewda/ketaki)
9) Shurul Pinnal (wound around braid)
10) Madras Kondai
11) Rettai Saada Pichoda
12) Ennai Jadai (hair decorated post an “oil bath”, a common practice in South India, usually requires the braiding of a small portion of hair to keep loose hair away from the face)
13) Vaira Jadai (Pin puram aka back view); Vaira=jewels/diamonds
14) Thazhampu Kamala Jadai (kamala=lotus, may refer to the pattern on the hairstyle?)
15) Rettai Jadai
16) Careful Careless Jadai (Jagridai Ajagridai Jadai)-I think this means both ordered and disordered
17) Rettai Pinnal
18) Vaira Jadai (Front view)
19) Anju Thalai Nagam (5 headed snake)
20) Pushpa Vangi Jadai (vangi is curved, based on the arm ornament)

_________________________________________________________

Many thanks to Raghu – who is one half of sangeethas – for providing me with this document, I hope I haven’t mislabelled the numbers! He informs me that styles 1 and 18 are modelled by the Travancore sisters. And thanks are due to my aunt who helped me with translations, I got stuck at several points:)

Posted in 1950s, fashion, Flowers, Hair, Indian Dress, Indian fashion, Magazine, Tamil, vintage fashion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Christmas Post

Miniature paintings of the 18th century and early nineteenth century sometimes contain Christian themes.  Often these were commissioned by Europeans, the palette and figures are reflective of prevalent Indian styles with some modifications.

Oudh offers some examples of paintings of The Annunciation [X] [X] [X]. A number of paintings are attributed to Mir Kalan Khan.

See also Company paintings.

19th century painting of Madonna and Child with a melding of styles. And a later version by Angelo da Fonseca (around mid 20th century) which is distinctly Indian. More of da Fonseca’s work here.

A bit late in sending out these wishes but hope you had a Merry Christmas! And wishing you all a Happy New Year!

Posted in 18th century, 19th century, Christianity, Colonial, Culture, Early 20th Century, Indian Dress, Paintings, Sari, Sari Blouse, vintage art, Vintage Dress | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The 1940s Post

The late 1940s was a time of somewhat boxy, padded blouses.  This blouse on the actress and dancer Suryakumari for example is almost like a man’s shirt (or perhaps more correctly a pyjama top).  As can be seen from the second pic, it is teamed with a bordered handloom sari. The translucent head covering seems an addition – these used to be common say around the 1890s and 1910s as the sari was evolving but perhaps not as late as the 1940s. The movie is 1948’s Samsara Nowka.

The elegantly dressed actress with Greer Garson, in a personal flickr album and in a 1960s style chudidar-kurta. And also in a silk sari teamed with a brocade blouse.

Posted in 1940s, 20th century, Cinema, Dancer, Early 20th Century, Indian Cinema, Indian fashion, Sari, Sari Blouse, Singer, South India, South Indian Cinema, Vintage Blouse, vintage fashion | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Indian Mod Post

Typically in the first half of an Indian movie you would have a Westernised heroine before the “curse of the second half” hit and out came the saris. And of course vamps were allowed to wear Western clothing all the time! Most of these clothes are similar to contemporaneous fashions in the West, albeit a few years behind at times.

In the late 50s and 60s: Slacks, skivvies. high waisted trousers, pedal pushers, the occasional scarf. The actresses: Mala Sinha, Shashikala, Madhubala, Shakila.

Posted in 1950s, 1960s, Actor, Bollywood, Indian Cinema, Indian fashion, Indian Women, Old Bollywood, Vintage, Vintage Blouse, Vintage Dress, vintage fashion | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Veil Post

wp1VEIL: avagunthana, niririgi, nirangika, mukhapata, sirovastra, yavanika.

Veiling is mentioned in Ancient Indian texts by any of the above names, a primary source being Kalidas who mentions the avagunthana in several places.  However, the practice does not appear to be intended for segregation, at several points in the texts women discard or lift a veil in public. The upper part of the sari itself could be used for veiling and sometimes it was used perhaps as a fashion piece or arranged over a hairstyle. Or, as is also the case in modern India, it was a part of bridal costume. More often than not it was a translucent piece of cloth.

Most historians hold that compulsory veiling arrived with Islamic rule in India but state that there is not always an exact correlation with region and population. In general purdah or ghoonghat was observed in the North and the practice fell away in other regions of India.

In the pics: Shakuntala in the court of Dushyanta (ACK); Dia Mirza; from the Life magazine photo archive; Ranjeeta in Laila Majnu.

Posted in Ancient India, Asia, Costume, Culture, historical costume, History, Indian Dress, Indian fashion, Indian History, Indian Women, Islamic Dress | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Diaspora Post

The heavy silver jewellery and skirts of Indian communities from Central and Western India are reflected in early photographs of immigrants to the West Indies. Early immigrants were often indentured labour from the then United Provinces and Eastern India. [X] [X] [X]

The first two pictures are taken in Bombay [X] [X] while the last two pictures are of Trinidadian women of Indian origin.

See also Dhurandhar’s watercolour and a portrait of folk dancers in Delhi.

Posted in 1880s, 1890s, 1900s, 1910s, 19th century, British Raj, Colonial, Costume, Culture, Diaspora, fashion, History, Immigration, India, Indian Dress, Indian fashion, Indian History, Late 19th century, Vintage, Vintage Dress, Women | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment