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How India transformed global fashion | Fabrics | Nutshell

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  • čas přidán 31. 01. 2021
  • 📲 Share on Whatsapp/Signal/Telegram - bit.ly/1NHowIndiaTransformedFa...
    This is the story of how India 'fashioned’ the world!
    🔔 SUBSCRIBE HERE - bit.ly/NSubscribe
    #Fashion #India #Nutshell
    VIDEO MAP
    What was special about Indian textiles? 00:18
    Why was Muslin special? 01:09
    Why Chinese and Malaysian royals stanned Indian textiles 01:30
    The Mughal influence on fashion 02:30
    How were Indian clothes dyed? 02:53
    Why were Indian textiles so popular? 03:18
    The beginnings of the modern textile industry in India 05:30
    What led to the decline of the industry? 05:57
    How Khadi became a symbol for India 06:40
    The Indian textile scene today 7:00
    ---------------------------------------------------
    CREDITS
    Producer
    Monik Chaudhry
    Writer
    Chiara Saldanha
    Director
    Chiara Saldanha
    Cast
    Harshita Gupta
    Editor
    Chiara Saldanha
    Executive Producer
    Jinal Mandot
    Design
    Aghil Prasannan
    Animation
    Cato Film
    Sound Design
    Hardik Desai
    Casting
    Clout
    Casting Associate
    Ashish Chawla
    Video Operations
    Lavanya Rakesh
    Subtitle
    Shemaroo Entertainment Ltd
    Copyright © 2021
    Pocket Aces Pictures Pvt. Ltd.

Komentáře • 41

  • @Nutshellindia
    @Nutshellindia  Před 3 lety +17

    What is your go-to outfit? 👗👕👖👚

    • @s.g.upadhyay2020
      @s.g.upadhyay2020 Před 3 lety

      Kgsqsxnjhghjju

    • @kmseyam7897
      @kmseyam7897 Před 3 lety +1

      1:30 you stole the muslin thing. Muslin was a traditional fabric from Dhaka, in Bengal. And, the word "Muslin" comes from the name of the city of Mosul, where Muslin was traded after being shiped out of Bengal. The original name of the Fabric is মলমল। Bangladesh govt. had taken steps to reinvent Muslin, and the scientists have already been successfully. Till now, 17 pieces of Muslin fabric had been made by the Bangladeshi team. So, edit your video please.

  • @vidhigarg6395
    @vidhigarg6395 Před rokem +4

    because of you, today i got to know about the great textile history of india , i feel proud to know this. being a fashion designer , i will give my best to let india touch again the new heights of success in textile. jai hind

  • @sarikashah5243
    @sarikashah5243 Před 3 lety +14

    Here after Filtercopy's recommendation ❤️❤️

  • @V1nce1234
    @V1nce1234 Před rokem +6

    Indian clothes are pretty avant garde, like "sari" which is an unstitched garment. It's pretty avant garde where u are playing with the form of fashion.

  • @rianhakani9193
    @rianhakani9193 Před 3 lety +14

    Guys it's really saddening that you'll dont have 100k subs
    I mean there are random guys getting 100k now and ur editing,content and narration Is nex level
    Hope you'll have more subs soon

    • @Nutshellindia
      @Nutshellindia  Před 3 lety +4

      Aww, thank you! Hoping to get there soon.♥️

  • @sarikashah5243
    @sarikashah5243 Před 3 lety +17

    Your editing level is superb ❤️❤️

  • @parikshitpatil7404
    @parikshitpatil7404 Před 3 lety +6

    This is a very constructive channel. Big thumbs from me 👍👍👍

  • @karanjeetkour9944
    @karanjeetkour9944 Před 2 lety +2

    Listing to you and watching your video is equal to read a book....very effectively explained.
    I am preparing for psc interview for assistant professor in textile and clothing....
    Thank you so much for wonderful efforts.
    Lots of love

  • @kmseyam7897
    @kmseyam7897 Před 3 lety +4

    1:30 you are wrong about the muslin thing. Muslin was a traditional fabric from Dhaka, in Bengal. And, the word "Muslin" comes from the name of the city of Mosul, where Muslin was traded after being shiped out of Bengal. The original name of the Fabric is মলমল। Bangladesh govt. had taken steps to reinvent Muslin, and the scientists have already been successfully. Till now, 17 pieces of Muslin fabric had been made by the Bangladeshi team. So, edit your video please, or share the sources of your information.

    • @shilpisolution
      @shilpisolution Před 2 lety +2

      but in 18th century ,Dhaka was very much part of India only

    • @love-dk7ii
      @love-dk7ii Před 2 lety

      Yeah you are right.

    • @love-dk7ii
      @love-dk7ii Před 2 lety

      @@shilpisolution yes it was part of India. But muslin is not from Hyderabad , it's from Bengal.

  • @saberwynter
    @saberwynter Před 3 lety +3

    I remember reading somewhere that along with fixing the prices of the textiles so low that the weavers were unable to redeem the cost of production the British would also use brute force and sheer violence to oppress those weavers who would try to sell to other buyers and were unwilling to play by the Company's rules. Terrible.
    Great video. It's so well made in every way... informative and succinct. Enlightening and enjoyable. 👍🏼

    • @Nutshellindia
      @Nutshellindia  Před 3 lety

      Thanks! Also, we'd love to read more about what you said and bring attention to it. Where did you read that information?

    • @saberwynter
      @saberwynter Před 3 lety

      @@Nutshellindia I first heard about it in Shashi Tharoor's Oxford debate video and then read about it in his book "Inglorious Empire". Here is a direct quote from his book:
      "As British manufacturing grew, they
      went further. Indian textiles were remarkably cheap-so much so that
      Britain’s cloth manufacturers, unable to compete, wanted them eliminated.
      The soldiers of the East India Company obliged, systematically smashing
      the looms of some Bengali weavers and, according to at least one
      contemporary account (as well as widespread, if unverifiable, belief),
      breaking their thumbs so they could not ply their craft."
      Now, take this with a pinch of salt. I also read somewhere else that it was self inflicted by the weavers.
      "Notes" by M.K. Gandhi (in "Young India" magazine, 30 Mar 1921):
      "Who cut the thumbs?
      ... The labour of these artisans was so cruelly suppressed that they were obliged to cut off their own thumbs in order to avoid imprisonment. Many speakers mix up facts and say that the Company's servants cut off the thumbs of artisans. In my opinion, such cutting off would be less cruel than the terrorism which resulted in self-mutilation."
      I found the above paragraph on this site 👇
      www.pastpresented.ukart.com/mahuadabar-thumbs.htm
      Here's another one:
      www.google.co.in/amp/s/www.sgbgatelier.com/world/2019/11/21/5-ways-imperial-britain-crippled-indian-handlooms%3fformat=amp
      Thanks for asking, by the way. It made me do a little bit of research on this topic and learn a little bit more about it. I was unable to find any direct source....maybe it's just a rumour, maybe there's some truth in it. Regardless, there's no disputing that the Company caused immense harm to those weavers.

    • @kmseyam7897
      @kmseyam7897 Před 3 lety

      1:30 @Nutshell , you are wrong about the muslin thing. Muslin was a traditional fabric from Dhaka, in Bengal. And, the word "Muslin" comes from the name of the city of Mosul, where Muslin was traded after being shiped out of Bengal. The original name of the Fabric is মলমল। Bangladesh govt. had taken steps to reinvent Muslin, and the scientists have already been successfully. Till now, 17 pieces of Muslin fabric had been made by the Bangladeshi team. So, edit your video please, or share your sources. 🇧🇩

    • @RameshChaudhary-zd5ch
      @RameshChaudhary-zd5ch Před 2 lety

      @@kmseyam7897 Bangladesh was india only for all but 75 years of history

  • @lokya1509
    @lokya1509 Před 3 lety +1

    Being Indian 🇮🇳

  • @kalipurush13
    @kalipurush13 Před 3 měsíci

    Muslin cloth used to so thin that it can be folded and kept in a match box

  • @saubhagyasrivastava6050

    Keep up the good work 👍👍

  • @devanandanaj334
    @devanandanaj334 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice video..😊

  • @prashantpandya2933
    @prashantpandya2933 Před 2 lety

    How do people could differentiate these many types of sadees??? I don't even understand which one is which ?

  • @aaibhagwati
    @aaibhagwati Před 3 lety +1

    Superb content and editing level❤️

  • @whatsup3519
    @whatsup3519 Před 2 lety

    Super video

  • @s.s8079
    @s.s8079 Před 2 lety

    very nice video

  • @Abhishek_gupta1729
    @Abhishek_gupta1729 Před rokem +1

    Ma'am Aaj kal aisi khabar felayi jaati hai ki pehle ki aurten bohat kam kapade pehna karti thi kya ye sach hai ki pehle ki bhartiya aurten breast area ko cover nahi Karti thi sirf neeche ka kapda pehenti thi voh bhi naa ke barabar. Kya ye sab sach hai?? Please reply 🙏

  • @monica.masala
    @monica.masala Před 6 měsíci +1

    My god..people watch chapri reels but not this gold stuff...

  • @dityaaandmomvlogs
    @dityaaandmomvlogs Před 3 lety

    pp

  • @youropiniondoesntmatter6354

    Why aren’t we so great now? 😔

    • @madtitanoboa462
      @madtitanoboa462 Před 3 lety +3

      hum aapas mein ladna toh band krdein pehle fir dekhna kitne din lagte hai huh....

    • @NostalgiaforInfinity
      @NostalgiaforInfinity Před 2 měsíci

      70 years of communist/socialist rule under the Congress and other leftist parties, that prevented any industries from developing after independence. And that was after the British had already destroyed our entire millennia old traditional textile industry. India was always a nation entrepreneurs and trading guilds that operated independent of the state, not under some nonsense "command economy" controlled by the government.

  • @Kattar_Hindu_Lucky
    @Kattar_Hindu_Lucky Před rokem

    Greatness of Bharat

  • @xr_sam
    @xr_sam Před 3 lety +2

    Kar lie subscribe thik hai ???
    Ab accha content dena nahi unsubscribe kr duga 😜😜😜....... Kidding 😜

  • @-isotope_k
    @-isotope_k Před 2 lety +3

    Indias was orginal people now we are just copying westerns 🥲🥲