CARE AS connection
There is something worth noticing about the act of caring for a handmade garment. When you fill a basin with cold water, add a gentle detergent, and wash your Daughters of India dress by hand, you are echoing ~ in a small, domestic way ~ the same care taken by the artisans who made it. In the workshop, every garment is hand-washed and sun-dried as part of the quality control process. Your home care continues a cycle of attentiveness that began in Sanganer.
This is one of the subtle gifts of handmade clothing. It asks you to pay attention. Not a great deal of attention ~ a few minutes of gentle washing, a moment of choosing shade over sun ~ but enough to create a relationship with the garment that goes beyond wearing and discarding. A garment cared for by hand becomes personal in a way that a garment tossed in a machine does not.
Slow fashion is not just about how clothing is made. It is about how it is worn, cared for, and kept. Gentle care is the final link in the chain that connects artisan to wearer, making the whole journey ~ from cotton field to wardrobe ~ one of intention and respect.