Daughters of India block-printed fabric displayed by artisans' hands wearing traditional Indian jewelry, showcasing handcrafted textile heritage and ethical fashion

Block Printing

THE ART OF THE block carver

Before a single impression can be made on cloth, someone must carve the block. The block carvers are the quiet architects of every printed pattern ~ their skill determines everything that follows.

Artisan hand-carving intricate design into wooden printing block

The Invisible Foundation

THE unseen CRAFT

When people admire a hand block-printed textile, they tend to think of the printer ~ the artisan who stands at the long table, pressing carved wood into cloth. But before the printer can begin, someone must make the block. That someone is the block carver, and their craft is among the most demanding and least visible in the entire chain of Indian textile production.


Shelves of hand-carved wooden printing blocks organised by pattern at carving workshop

Rows of carved blocks at the workshop ~ every pattern tells the story of the carver's hand.


PRECISION AND permanence

Block carving is a form of relief woodcarving with extraordinarily exacting requirements. The design must be carved in reverse, as a mirror image, since the printed impression will flip the pattern. Every line must be precise, because any error in the block will be reproduced hundreds or thousands of times on cloth. The depth of the carving must be consistent ~ deep enough that the background does not print, shallow enough that the raised design picks up dye evenly.

And the work must be done entirely by hand, using small steel chisels and a mallet, with no room for the kind of corrections that other woodworking allows. A mistake in block carving cannot be undone. There is no filler, no patch, no way to add wood back once it has been removed. The carver works forward only, and every cut is permanent.


Indian block carver handcrafting wooden printing blocks for traditional block-printing textile techniques used by Daughters of India
Indian artisan hand-carving intricate floral patterns into a wooden block for Daughters of India block-printing textiles, demonstrating traditional block-printing preparation techniques
Indian artisan hand-carving intricate floral patterns into a wooden block for traditional block-printing, showcasing Daughters of India's commitment to authentic textile craftsmanship

Block carver portrait at work chiselling design into wooden printing block

WHO ARE THE block carvers?

In Rajasthan, block carving has traditionally been the work of specific communities, particularly those within the Chhipa (printer) and allied artisan castes, though carving and printing have historically been distinct specialisations. Block carving is often a hereditary craft ~ skills, tools, and design knowledge passed from father to son across generations.

A young carver typically begins learning as a child, sitting beside a father or uncle, watching the rhythm of chisel and mallet. The early years involve simpler tasks: smoothing wood, tracing designs, carving basic geometric forms. Over time, the apprentice progresses to more complex patterns ~ the tight curves of floral motifs, the fine lines of jaal lattice work, the delicate detail of a buti repeating element. It can take a decade or more before a carver is trusted with the most intricate commissions.


“The block carver sees the finished cloth before anyone else. In the grain of the wood, in the space between the chisel marks, the pattern already exists. The carver's work is to reveal it.

Daughters of India


Man carving wooden block printing patterns seated on floor in traditional posture

The Material

THE WOOD ~ Shisham

The wood of choice for Indian printing blocks is Shisham ~ Dalbergia sissoo, commonly known as Indian rosewood. Shisham is native to the Indian subcontinent and has been used for block carving for centuries, favoured for a combination of properties that make it uniquely suited to the task.

Shisham has a tight, fine grain that holds intricate detail without splintering or crumbling. This is critical for block printing, where the carved design may include lines less than a millimetre wide. The wood is also dense and durable, capable of withstanding thousands of impressions without significant wear. A well-made Shisham block, properly maintained, can remain in use for decades ~ some blocks in active use today are generations old.

Shisham is also reasonably workable despite its density. It responds well to sharp chisels, allowing the carver to achieve clean, precise cuts. It does not tend to split unpredictably, which is essential when carving the fine bridges and connections that hold a relief design together.


ANATOMY OF A printing block

A finished printing block ~ called a bunta ~ consists of several key elements:

  • The face ~ the carved design surface that contacts the dye and fabric
  • The body ~ typically 5-8 centimetres deep, providing enough mass for the printer to grip and strike
  • Registration pins (tikki) ~ small metal pins set into the corners of the block, used to align the pattern precisely with adjacent impressions
  • A handle or grip area ~ often simply the back of the block, sometimes with a carved handle for larger blocks
  • Drill holes ~ small holes drilled through the body of the block to allow air to escape during printing, preventing suction that could smear the design

5-15

Days to carve one block

<1mm

Finest line width

Decades

Lifespan of a well-kept block


Close-up of wooden printing block being hand-carved with fine chisel detail

THE CARVING process

The process begins with selecting a suitable piece of Shisham. The carver looks for wood that is well-seasoned ~ dried slowly over months or years to ensure stability. Green or insufficiently dried wood will warp and crack as it continues to lose moisture, ruining the carved design. The block is cut to the required size and the face is planed smooth.

The design is drawn or traced onto the prepared wood surface. Traditionally, this was done freehand by the master carver, working from memory or from a paper pattern. Today, designs may be drawn on paper first and transferred to the block using carbon paper or similar methods. Crucially, the design must be drawn in reverse ~ a mirror image of the intended print. For a multi-colour design requiring several blocks, each block must carry its portion of the pattern in precise spatial relationship to the others.


Artisan hand-carving floral design into wooden printing block with chisel and mallet

Chisel and mallet, grain by grain ~ the carver removes everything that is not the pattern.


CARVE, FINISH, condition

The carving itself is done with small steel chisels of various widths and profiles ~ flat chisels for clearing large areas, V-shaped gouges for fine lines, curved tools for the arcs and circles of floral motifs. The carver works seated on the floor in the traditional posture, the block held steady between the feet or against a low support, the chisel driven by taps of a small wooden mallet. The background areas ~ everything that should not print ~ are chiselled away, leaving the design standing in relief. Fine detail work requires extraordinary control. The carver may be removing slivers of wood less than a millimetre wide. A single slip can destroy hours of work.

Once the carving is complete, the block is carefully finished. Any rough edges are smoothed, registration pins are inserted, and air-release holes are drilled. The block is then soaked in mustard oil ~ a traditional conditioning treatment that penetrates the wood, preventing it from drying out and cracking. This oil treatment is repeated periodically throughout the block's working life, and it is one of the reasons Shisham blocks can remain in use for so long. Before a new block is used for production printing, it undergoes testing ~ trial impressions on scrap fabric to check the quality of the design transfer, the evenness of the print, and the accuracy of registration with companion blocks.


Artisan carving detailed floral pattern into Shisham wood printing block

TIME AND complexity

The time required to carve a printing block varies enormously depending on the complexity of the design, the size of the block, and the fineness of the detail. A simple geometric block with bold lines and large open areas might be completed in a few days. A complex floral block with intricate detail ~ the kind of block used for fine Sanganer printing ~ can take five to fifteen days of concentrated work.

At Daughters of India, the printing blocks used for our garments range across this spectrum. The blocks for styles like our Kyra and Sahana prints, which use two-block designs, are relatively efficient to produce but still require careful carving to achieve the clean, precise impressions that characterise our fabrics. The blocks for our Jasmine designs, which require up to six separate blocks working in concert, represent a significantly greater investment of carving time ~ potentially two months of work before a single metre of cloth can be printed.


BLOCKS FOR Daughters of India

It varies by design. Our Kyra and Sahana prints typically require two blocks ~ one for the primary pattern and one for a secondary element or fill colour. Our Jasmine designs are among the most complex, requiring up to six blocks to build the full pattern with all its colour layers. Most of our designs fall somewhere in this range.

Between five and fifteen days per block is typical for the level of detail in our designs. A six-block Jasmine set could represent over two months of carving work before production printing can begin.

With proper care ~ regular mustard oil conditioning and careful handling ~ our Shisham blocks can last for decades. Some printing workshops in Rajasthan continue to use blocks that are generations old. The edges soften slightly over time, giving older blocks a distinctive quality that many printers and collectors value.

Retired printing blocks are sometimes kept as reference pieces or family heirlooms. In some workshops, old blocks with particularly beautiful carving are displayed as decorative objects. The design knowledge they represent ~ patterns developed and refined over generations ~ gives them a value beyond their functional use.


Collection of stacked wooden printing blocks showing generations of carved patterns

Living Heritage

DESIGNS PASSED DOWN THROUGH generations

One of the most remarkable aspects of the block carving tradition is the way designs are transmitted across time. Many of the patterns carved into blocks today have roots that stretch back centuries. A floral buti motif, a vine border, a geometric jaal ~ these design elements have been refined and reinterpreted by successive generations of carvers, each adding their own subtle variations while maintaining the essential character of the pattern.

This is not mere reproduction. Each generation of carvers brings their own sensibility to inherited designs, responding to the aesthetics of their time while respecting the tradition they have received. New designs are also created, often drawing on the vast vocabulary of existing motifs and recombining them in fresh ways. The best carvers are both custodians and innovators, holding the past and the present in a productive tension.

In some families, collections of old blocks serve as a kind of design library ~ a physical archive of patterns developed over decades or centuries. When a new design is needed, the carver may refer to these ancestral blocks for inspiration, adapting elements from older patterns into new compositions. The continuity is not rigid but organic, like a living language that evolves while retaining its fundamental grammar.


“A printing block is a strange kind of artwork. It is made to be pressed into service ~ literally ~ again and again, transferring its beauty to something else. The carver creates in order to give away.

Daughters of India


Aerial view of wooden printing blocks being carved with fine tools

A CRAFT WORTH knowing

Block carving exists in a quiet space. It lacks the visual drama of the printing process itself, where colours bloom on cloth in real time. It lacks the romance of dyeing, with its vats of rich colour and the alchemy of chemical transformation. It is, at its core, a person sitting with a piece of wood and a set of small tools, removing material grain by grain to reveal a pattern that will, eventually, appear on fabric worn by someone they will never meet.

And yet, without the block carver, none of the rest is possible. The quality of the printed cloth depends entirely on the quality of the block. The precision of the pattern, the crispness of the line, the beauty of the motif ~ all of these begin in the carver's hands. Every Daughters of India garment carries within its printed pattern the invisible signature of the carver who made the tool that made the impression.

In a world that celebrates the visible and the immediate, it seems worth pausing to acknowledge the craft that works in silence, behind the scenes, and makes everything else possible.


Printing the Jasmine in Shell ~ this intricate design requires six separate blocks, each aligned by hand


Shipping & Returns

All prices include Canadian duties and taxes — you won't pay anything extra on delivery. Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted in India and shipped directly to you.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. Orders are shipped via DHL Express. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Cost
Standard · 5–8 business days $20 CAD
Express · 3–5 business days $35 CAD
Orders over $370 CAD Free


Your order price includes all Canadian import duties and taxes — we handle customs clearance through DHL so there are no surprise fees at your door. The price you see at checkout is the price you pay.

You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • To arrange your return, contact us at hello@daughtersofindia.com. We recommend using a trackable shipping service.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

Shipping & Returns

All prices include Canadian duties and taxes — you won't pay anything extra on delivery. Our slow fashion garments are handcrafted in India and shipped directly to you.

We are a small team however we endeavour to process your order within 1-3 business days. Orders are shipped via DHL Express. You'll receive a tracking number by email once your order ships.

Delivery Cost
Standard · 5–8 business days $20 CAD
Express · 3–5 business days $35 CAD
Orders over $370 CAD Free


Your order price includes all Canadian import duties and taxes — we handle customs clearance through DHL so there are no surprise fees at your door. The price you see at checkout is the price you pay.

You can find our full shipping policy here.

We want you to love your Daughters of India piece. If it's not quite right, we're happy to help — simply return within 30 days and we'll issue a Daughters of India Gift Card for the full value. Your credit never expires and can be used on any piece, including new collections.

  • Items must be returned in original condition — unworn, unwashed with tags attached, folded neatly in the Daughters of India tote bag provided.
  • To arrange your return, contact us at hello@daughtersofindia.com. We recommend using a trackable shipping service.
  • Refunds are processed within 5–7 business days of receiving the return.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or store credit.

You can find our full returns policy here.

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