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Source Description
<em>Rumal</em> refers to a double-sided embroidery technique perfected by women in the Pahari region of the northwest Himalayas. Unlike other forms of embroidery, no knots or loose strings are visible. Rumals were intended to look like paintings on cloth. An artist who was skilled in making Pahari paintings drew outlines of the composition with a brush on hand-loomed cotton muslin fabric and noted the colors to be used. Women then used a type of stitch called “double satin stitch” to create flat planes of color on both sides of the fabric. Girls were responsible for winding the silk threads into multistrand embroidery floss. Rumals were treasured as objects of wealth and given as gifts during weddings or state ceremonies. <br><br>Many rumals depict subjects drawn from Hindu devotional literature. In the center, the semidivine monkey general Hanuman pays his respects to his lord Rama, Rama’s wife Sita, and Rama’s brother Lakshmana. Surrounding them above and to the right are bucolic rural scenes from the life of Krishna, another human incarnation of the god Vishnu. Krishna with his flute serenades the <em>gopi</em>s (women of the cow herding community) and entertains his friends the cowherd boys (<em>gopa</em>s). Flowering plants, vines, and wild animals populate the remaining space and borders. With such scenes, the painstaking act of double-sided embroidery becomes a devotional endeavor that generates religious merit.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
159635
label
Rumal with Rama and Krishna scenes
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
159635
contentType
object
title
Rumal with Rama and Krishna scenes
description
<em>Rumal</em> refers to a double-sided embroidery technique perfected by women in the Pahari region of the northwest Himalayas. Unlike other forms of embroidery, no knots or loose strings are visible. Rumals were intended to look like paintings on cloth. An artist who was skilled in making Pahari paintings drew outlines of the composition with a brush on hand-loomed cotton muslin fabric and noted the colors to be used. Women then used a type of stitch called “double satin stitch” to create flat planes of color on both sides of the fabric. Girls were responsible for winding the silk threads into multistrand embroidery floss. Rumals were treasured as objects of wealth and given as gifts during weddings or state ceremonies. <br><br>Many rumals depict subjects drawn from Hindu devotional literature. In the center, the semidivine monkey general Hanuman pays his respects to his lord Rama, Rama’s wife Sita, and Rama’s brother Lakshmana. Surrounding them above and to the right are bucolic rural scenes from the life of Krishna, another human incarnation of the god Vishnu. Krishna with his flute serenades the <em>gopi</em>s (women of the cow herding community) and entertains his friends the cowherd boys (<em>gopa</em>s). Flowering plants, vines, and wild animals populate the remaining space and borders. With such scenes, the painstaking act of double-sided embroidery becomes a devotional endeavor that generates religious merit.
date
1700s
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79979559
genreSpecific
Embroidery
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 64.5 x 114 cm (25 3/8 x 44 7/8 in.)
cul
Northern India, Pahari Kingdom of Chamba
accession
1996.349
Source extras
tec
Silk and silver wire on cotton; embroidery
tombstone
Rumal with Rama and Krishna scenes, 1700s. Northern India, Pahari Kingdom of Chamba. Silk and silver wire on cotton; embroidery; overall: 64.5 x 114 cm (25 3/8 x 44 7/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of William E. Ward in memory of his wife, Evelyn Svec Ward, 1996.349
collection
Textiles
didYouKnow
Especially in the borders, some of the embroidery has fallen away, revealing the brushwork of the designer.
creditline
Gift of William E. Ward in memory of his wife, Evelyn Svec Ward
updatedAt
2026-06-10 19:46:40.658000
sourceId
159635
dept
Textiles
coll
Textiles
med
Silk and silver wire on cotton; embroidery
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
54c776efc676006d