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ARTS & CRAFTS of North-East - |
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Textiles of Mizoram
(about
Mizoram Introduction / Factfile)
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| Introduction
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There are a number of craftsman and skilled artisans among the Mizos. Weaving is an internal part of the Mizo culture and the women learn how to weave at an early age. Puans in numerous designs are produced by them on traditional lion looms. These are somewhat like lungis, usually about 45” to 48” in width and about 36” in length, worn by the women, and are their native dress, Puans are noted for their beautiful design and intricate embroidery which is invariably worked out along with the weave. Mizos have a wealth of motifs. The patterns of traditional puans are now being adopted with many fresh combinations. Mizo women also turn out shawl and their shoulder bags, which are quite attractive, and not too expensive considering their quality.
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| Technique of production
The fly shuttle loom introduced to produce better fabrics of high-ranking members of the society. This complex loom helps the weaver in producing longer lengths of cloth of uniform quality. The loom consists of four large upright bamboo poles, each with a notch and tongue for carrying the front and the back rods. The four poles about 130 cm high are rectangular braced by small, horizontally placed bamboo poles, two each on the four sides.
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| Dyeing
All dyeing is done by women, and it is ana, or forbidden, for men to take part in the operation, as it is believed that any man who touches dye or a cloth that is being dyed will be unable to shoot any game, and will be especially liable to suffer from consumption. The reason why participation in dyeing results in bad luck in the chase is rather complicated. Animals are terrified of blood, and consequently are very afraid of the women due to the menstrual flow. The hands of man who takes part if dying are strained with the blue dye, and the smell of the dye hangs about them. The souls of the wild animals scent this at once, and when such a man approaches, they associate him in their minds with women, become very frightened, and refuse to allow him to approach them. Hence, a man who helps his wife to dye cloth is always unlucky in the chase. |
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| The dresses worn by the Tribes of Mizoram | |
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Apparals |
The men’s dress could not well be simpler, consisting as it does of a single cloth about 7 feet long and 5 wide. It is worn as follows: - one corner is grasped in the left hand and the cloth is passed over the left shoulder, behind the back, under the right arm across the chest and the end thrown over the left shoulder. Although it would appear probable, that clothing so loosely done would be continually falling off yet as a matter of fact, accidents of that sort seldom occur. In cold weather, one or more cloths are worn one over the other and also a white coat, reaching well down the thigh but only fastened at the throat. These coats are ornamented on the sleeves with bands of red and white of various patterns. When at work in hot weather the people wraps his cloth round the waist, letting the ends hang down in front, and should he find the sun warm and if he is wearing two cloths he will use one as a puggri. |
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Puggris are sometimes worn when out in the sun for long and some affect rather a quaint style, twisting the cloth round the head so as to make an end stand up straight over each ear. All these garments are of cotton, grown locally and manufactured by the women of the household. The cloths in general use are white, but every man likes to have two or three blue cloths ornamented with stripes of various patterns. The dress of the chief is the same as that of the common people, except on occasions of ceremony, when they wear dark blue cloths, with red lines of a particular pattern and plumes made of the tail feathers of the king crow, in their hair knots. These plumes are very much priced and are kept most carefully in bamboo tubes and leather caps. The cloth referred to above can also be worn by anyone who has given certain feasts. |
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| The women’s dress
The women are no more addicted to fine clothes than their men folk. All women wear the same costume; a dark blue cotton cloth, just long enough to go round the wearer’s waist with a slight over-lap, and held up by a girdle of brass wire or string, serves as a petticoat which only reaches to the knee, and only other garments being a short white jacket and a cloth which is worn in the same manner as the man. On gala days, the only addiction to the costume is a picturesque headdress worn by girls while dancing. This consists of a chaplet made of brass and coloured cane, into which are inserted porcupine quills, and to the upper ends of these are fixed the green wing-feathers of the common parrot, tipped with tufts which hang strings of glistering wing covers of green beetles. The women smoke as much as the men and have a special pipe, a miniature hookah about 9 inches high.
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| Special attire A single cloth is wrapped tightly around the waist, a haversack protected by a bear or tiger skin guard over one shoulder, and a fighting dao or dah over the other, and a gun in his hand completed each warrior’s equipment. a man who had earned a title of “Thanhchhuah” is allowed to wear a cloth of a certain pattern and those who have killed men in war have special head-dresses, known as “chhawndawl” and “arke-ziak”.
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The Hmars weave many designs and some of the important ones are: |
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Paiteis do not weave many indigenous designs in their cloth but whatever little designs are woven seems to be indigenous and seems they attach distinctive value to those.
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The Riang also have the same dresses as the people of the other communities of Mizoram. Apart from the other dresses, the riang during the marriage ceremony give the following clothes as the bride price during the marriages
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| GLOSSARY | |
| Arnai | Lower garment |
| Biah | turban |
| Dawlrem Kawr | woman’s attire |
| Jainkup | scarf |
| Jainsem | women’s garment |
| Kawppui zikzial | embroidered hand woven cloth |
| Majetro | Shawl |
| Phanya | women’s upper garment |
| Puanbu | weaving material |
| Puandum | a kind of cloth |
| Pusnbu | weaving material |
| Puanhlap | cotton cloth for men |
| Puanpui | quilt/blanket |
| Risa | piece of cloth for covering the breast. |
| Ritami | weaving
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