Banarasi Sarees: How The Panaya Is Carrying Varanasi’s Looms Forward

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Jul 1, 2026 - 14:15
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Banarasi Sarees: How The Panaya Is Carrying Varanasi’s Looms Forward
“Banarasi Sarees: How The Panaya Is Carrying Varanasi’s Looms Forward”
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1 Jul 2026
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Banarasi Sarees: How The Panaya Is Carrying Varanasi’s Looms Forward

Panaya

Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh) [India], July 1: For more than five hundred years, the narrow lanes of Varanasi have echoed with the rhythmic clatter of handlooms. In small homes and family workshops along the Ganges, weavers sit for days, sometimes weeks, coaxing silk and gold thread into patterns their grandfathers once wove. The result is one of India’s most recognised textiles – the Banarasi saree. Few brands have stayed as close to this original process as The Panaya, which works directly with weaving families in Varanasi rather than mass-market suppliers.

This is not a quick craft. A single saree can take anywhere from fifteen days to six months to complete, depending on the intricacy of its design. Understanding what goes into that time, and how a brand like The Panaya fits into preserving it, is the best way to appreciate why this weave has survived centuries of change.

The Panaya and the Mughal-Era Roots of Banarasi Weaving

Banarasi weaving is often traced back to the Mughal era, when Persian motifs such as the paisley, floral vines, and intricate borders began merging with local Indian craftsmanship. Varanasi, already a centre of trade and culture, became the natural home for this fusion. Over time, the city’s weavers refined techniques passed down through generations, and “Banarasi” became shorthand not just for a place, but for a standard of silk weaving that The Panaya continues to follow today.

The craft is largely kept alive by families who have been weaving for three, four, or even five generations. The Panaya’s own weaving partners fall into this category – fourth-generation artisans whose workshops are still run out of homes, with looms set up in courtyards or front rooms, and entire households contributing to a single saree, from dyeing the yarn to threading the final motif.

PNN (This story has been published from a syndicated feed, agency source, or press release. NewsWaala Team may not have edited or verified the content independently.)