In a narrow lane in Varanasi, before sunrise, Sunita sits at her loom. Her hands move with the kind of muscle memory that takes a lifetime to build — the warp threads singing a low, rhythmic note as the shuttle passes through. By evening, a few inches of Banarasi silk will exist that did not exist that morning. It will take three more days to complete the saree. It will last a lifetime.
This is not a romantic metaphor. This is Tuesday.
A Living Heritage Under Pressure
India’s handloom sector is the second-largest employer in the country after agriculture, supporting over 43 lakh weavers — the majority of them women. The textiles they produce are irreplaceable: the gossamer Chanderi of Madhya Pradesh, the geometric Pochampally ikat of Telangana, the mirror-worked Rabari embroidery of Gujarat, the centuries-old Paithani of Maharashtra. Each weave carries regional identity, seasonal rhythm, and generations of accumulated knowledge.
And yet, the sector is under siege. Powerloom imitations undercut handloom prices. Synthetic fibres have replaced natural ones in cheaper markets. Young weavers migrate to cities in search of steadier incomes. The average age of a master weaver in India is rising — and the apprenticeship pipeline is thinning.
What is being lost is not just textile. It is knowledge systems, design vocabularies, ecological relationships with natural dyes and local fibres — things that cannot be scanned, archived, or replicated by a machine.
Women at the Centre
What often goes unsaid in conversations about Indian handloom is how thoroughly it is a women’s economy. Women constitute over 70% of the handloom workforce in many states — weaving, dyeing, finishing, embroidering, and increasingly, designing and selling.
Designers and entrepreneurs have begun building directly on this foundation. Anavila Misra sources and champions linen sarees woven by small clusters across Bengal and Orissa. Gaurang Shah has dedicated his career to reviving near-extinct weaves, working directly with weavers.
How to Wear It — and Why It Matters
For the conscious consumer, handloom is both an aesthetic choice and an economic intervention. A handwoven saree purchased directly from a weaver cluster or a GI-certified label ensures that the premium paid travels down the chain to the person who actually made it.
The Government of India’s India Handloom mark, and the Geographical Indication (GI) tag system, offer consumers a degree of authentication. A Kanjeevaram with a GI tag is not just beautiful — it is traceable.
The New Handloom Customer
What is particularly exciting about the current moment is who is wearing handloom. It is not just the older generation preserving family sarees. It is women in their twenties at gallery openings in Mumbai. It is designers layering ikat with denim. It is brides choosing hand-embroidered regional textiles over imported lehengas.
The handloom customer today is not nostalgic. She is discerning, informed, and increasingly unwilling to accept a copy when the original is available — and when the original means something.
Sunita finishes her saree on a Friday. By Sunday, it has been listed on a cooperative’s website. By the following weekend, it is on a woman’s shoulders in Bangalore who does not know Sunita’s name — but who chose, deliberately, to own something real.
That connection — invisible, incomplete, but present — is what sustainable fashion, at its most honest, actually is.