Injiri Design
The Process
India, across her length and breadth, has been the land of extraordinary handwoven fabric of multifarious styles, colours, textures and unique features, pertaining to the specific region they are grown and spun in.Our process centers around working closely with master weavers and their textile vocabulary, across various parts of India. We are constantly engaged in conversations with these keepers of intangible human heritage. Design stories start with curating and studying old pieces of textiles which showcase the crafts at its purest forms.Most crafts in india, especially the ones of textiles, have unique codes pertaining to the geography they come from. From the selvedge being built to protect the fabric for generations of usage, to motifs that reveal the identity of the soil it rises from. We try to focus on such details and build our design stories around them. We celebrate fabric from its inception in the yarn at the end of the process in the tangible product.
Injiri Founder
The first seed & her story
The beauty of Rajasthan, a place where Chinar grew up, is steeped in history and also home to several indigenous handicrafts. Travelling extensively with a love for traditional art and culture, Chinar enjoyed a nurturing exposure towards everything handmade and artisanal.This penchant for the beauty of traditional objects led her to pursue a Bachelors degree in fine arts at the historic Maharaja SayajiRao University followed by an intensive Textile Design post graduation at the National Institute of Design,Ahmedabad India.
It was during her design education where her knowledge and interest for Indian textiles deepened. During a documentation process(part of her design program) in Ladakh, Chinar had her first in depth encounter with the people who create traditional textiles, indigenous to a geographical area. This was followed by work trips to clusters such as Lucknow, Chanderi and Kachchh which formed important experiences sensitising her towards the story of hands, lives and history behind such textile art.Chinar’s lac-dyeing research project in Bhujodi, Kachchh was instrumental in reviving techniques of organic dyeing with the initiatives of the Master weavers.Chinar founded Injiri in the year 2009 with a desire to form long lasting liaisons with Indian textiles through her work and on going explorations in regional techniques.
