July
31, 2018 12:17 IST Ambaram
creates hand-woven cotton clothes and accessories for new-borns
One
afternoon, SP Arun Kumar chanced upon a pillow at his home in Madurai. It
changed the course of his life. “It was stuffed with old baby clothes that
belonged to my sister and me,” recalls the 29-year-old. Kumar felt the fabric,
ran his hands through the embroidery that his mother had done. “It was unlike
anything I saw at the regular textile stores,” he says. “The clothes were
simple, made of the softest cotton, and the colours were mild and pleasant.”
Kumar, who then worked as a web-designer in Chennai, thought, why not make
quality baby clothes? He didn’t like city life anyway and saw the business idea
as something that would take him back to his roots.
“My
sister Ponmani and I came up with the concept for a line of clothes that are
suited for our weather conditions and are kinder on the skin and environment,”
says Kumar. That’s how Ambaram came to be. Started in December 2016, the
company makes hand-woven clothes for new-borns and babies up to the age of one.
According to Kumar, Ambaram means fabric in ancient Tamil.
Kumar
says that hand-woven cotton is better suited for South India’s weather.
“Knitted fabrics, for instance, are not breathable. Wear them in the hot sun
and you can see how the material doesn’t let sunlight in.” Kumar says that
nylon and polyester are a big no-no. “Dressing up babies in such fabrics,
according to me, is an act of violence,” he feels. “We strive to go the
Gandhian way — we source fabrics from Gandhigram at Dindigul and from handloom
weavers in and around the weaving clusters of Chennimalai,” he adds.
Ponmani,
who holds a Bachelor’s degree in Fashion and Garment Design, patterns the
clothes. The Ambaram team is all for no frills — their range consists of
off-white jablas with pastel borders and tie-ups, shorts, and nappies. “We
wanted to keep off zippers, buttons, and elastic that can hurt baby skin,”
explains Kumar. The brother-sister duo is now working on clothes for kids up to
the age of five. “We plan to introduce frocks and kurta-pyjama sets with simple
thread work,” he adds.
Ambaram’s
USP is its gift box — a combination of jablas, nappies, bibs, shorts, a
bracelet made of vasambu (calamus root), palm leaf rattle, and a handmade
cradle mobile. Kumar sources the rattles from palm-leaf artisans in
Thiruchendur and Ramanathapuram. “We wanted to provide an eco-friendly
alternative to the flood of plastic toys in the market.”
Most
of their orders are online. They market their products on their Facebook page
and by word-of-mouth. Ambaram’s unit is at Puliyanur village, Villupuram. “When
we first visited the village, we saw most parents there worked in far off
places and visited their children only during weekends. Their children grew up
with their grandparents and lacked a connect with their parents,” says Kumar.
Along with Ponmani, he stared a tailoring school to provide women there an
alternative livelihood. “Today, we have a team of three that works for us,” he
says. “We hope the unit becomes self-sustainable.”
No comments:
Post a Comment