Baanasri Gamcha / Towel Red and White
Banasri Gamcha/Towel Black White A Gamucha is a traditional thin, coarse cotton towel found in India,
Bangladesh as well as various parts of South and Southeast Asia and is
used to dry the body after bathing or wiping sweat.
one side of the shoulder. Its appearance varies from region to region, and it has
Oriya Mahabharata by Sarala Dasa. Male villagers wear it as dhoti. Children of tribal
communities in Orissa wear Gamucha until their adolescence after which they wear dhoti.
Weavers of traditional tantubaya or Jogi community migrated from Bangladesh to
Tripura and weavers of Orissa produce good quality gamucha.
Story of a Gamcha
Banasri Gamcha/Towel Black White
The gamucha is most commonly found with a check and striped patterns of red,
orange or green. Plain white gamchhas with colored borders from Orissa and
Assam are local handicrafts and may be worn around the neck with traditional
Indian attire. In western areas, gamucha is primarily make in red color and
are plain like cloth. In southern India, gamucha is more coarse and are available
in various dyes. Even homemade lightweight fur towels are also popularly termed as
gamchhas. Gamucha wear by the South Asian people, especially in the Indian
states of Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Jharkhand, and the Purvanchal region,
because they are not as thick as Western-style towels and better suited to the country’s
tropical, humid climate.
to as dismal. hamams as a traditional male loincloth and towel worn during bathing and massage.
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