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Pencil Skirt Girls Cotton Summer Dress Size 10 (skt462)

Pencil Skirt Girls Cotton Summer Dress Size 10 (skt462)

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Pencil Skirt Girls Cotton Summer Dress Size 10 (skt462)

 
 
 
SKU:  

skt315

Availability:   Out of stock
 
 
Out of stock


Product Promotions
  • Buy more; Save more. 10% off on $99, 15% on $149, and 20% on $199  Here's how (restrictions apply)

Features
  • Drawstring Skirt in Handloom cotton from India

  • Waist 32 inches Length 34 inches, Umbrella Cut, Drawstring

  • For outdoor casual wear

  • Hand block printed

  • Shipped in 24 hours from Gurgaon, a New Delhi Suburb in India.


Description

Pencil Skirt in handloom woven cotton fabric is especially suitable for women in late twenties and beyond. Hand-block prints in Indian motifs make them attractive casual apparel. Drawstring at waist adds to their casual look and feel. Urban women in India in the age group twenty five to fifty prefer to wear these skirts in spring and summer. Long cotton skirts have airy feel in summer.

Early Indian literature, speaks of the bhairnivasni, a skirt like garment, which evolved from the antariya, a simple tube shaped garment. This was stitched on one side, gathered and held at the waist by a girdle. Women wore it as a lower garment. It later evolved into a skirt with a drawstring called the ghaghri made from five and a half meters of fabric. The skirt in India is known by many different names, depending on the regional style, the most popular, by far, being the ghaghra.It was the flare that made the ghaghra such a sumptuous garment and one so captivating that it was celebrated both in poetry and art. The ghaghra is really a long skirt, which has the construction of a simple gathered skirt or a flared gored skirt. It covers the legs fully or partially, depending on the norms of propriety among different ethnic groups, although a long ghaghra usually relates to more puritanical modesty. Another term used was the lehenga, a compound of the Sanskrit words lanka (waist) and anga (body or limb). The lehenga is generally associated with a panelled skirt that is narrower than the ghaghra. However, there are no rigid definitions and the terms have found more generic usages.


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