India Tourism Guides Best Places to Visit in India through indiasite
Nobody dares use color the way Indians do, dramatically audaciously and straight from the heart creating a unique art.




States Art and Craft Work

India - Arts and Crafts - Pottery
Golden Triangle Package Tour
Rameshwaram Tours
- Saurashtra Darshan Tour
Duration: 03 Nights - 04 Days Book Now
- Mumbai Nasik Tours
Duration: 06 Nights - 07 Days Book Now
- Bangalore Mysore Tours
Duration: 06 Nights - 07 Days Book Now
- Tirupati Temple Hyderabad Tour
Duration: 05 Nights - 06 Days Book Now
- Ajanta Ellor Package
Duration: 05 Nights - 06 Days Book Now
- South India Temples
Duration: 08 Nights - 09 Days Book Now
- Beach Tour Goa
Duration: 04 Nights - 05 Days Book Now
- India Tiger Tour
Duration: 04 Nights - 05 Days Book Now
Chardham Yatra Tour
Plan Your Tour

Pottery


Pottery Potters pottering about on their wheel and fashioning all kinds of pitchers and earthenware are a common sight in India. While pottery for daily use – like gharas (water pots), surahis (pitchers), diyas (lamps) and gamlas (flower pots) – is made all over India, certain areas specialize in a particular type.


¤ Diverse Variety of pottery

Terracotta
Terracotta Perhaps the most common form of pottery in India, terracotta pops up in almost every state. Votive figures of elephants, serpents, birds and horses are made in Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and the Jhabua and Bastar regions of Madhya Pradesh. Quite similar to these are the horses of Darbhanga in Bihar which are painted in bright rainbow colors once they are made. Another place known for its magnificent, six-metre high terracotta horses is Tamil Nadu.
Terracotta panels and storage jars painted white and decorated with tiny mirrors are common in Gujarat and Rajasthan. Molela in Rajasthan excels in sculpted terracotta plaques and icons of Rajput heroes and Hindu deities.
Orissa and Madhya Pradesh have a charming tradition of decorative roof top tiles, made partly by hand moulding and partly on the wheel. These tiles, shaped like half tubes, have perched on top of them figures of elephants, monkeys, bears, reptiles, gods and goddesses and are considered a status symbol among the rural people.

Blue-Glaze
Blue-glaze Delhi, Kashmir, Jaipur (Rajasthan) and Khurja (Uttar Pradesh) are known for the use of blue glaze on pottery made from Multani mitti, or Fuller’s earth. Essentially an imported technique, it was first developed by enterprising Mongol artisans who combined Chinese glazing technology with Persian decorative arts. During its infancy, it was strictly used to make tiles to decorate mosques, tombs and palaces in Central Asia but Kashmiri potters soon took to it with a vengeance.

The traditional Persian designs have now been adapted to please a more sophisticated clientele. Apart from the predictable urns, jars, pots and vases, you’ll now find tea sets, cups and saucers, plates and glasses, jugs, ashtrays and even napkin rings.

Booking Information/Reservation


Book Your Tour Now

Enquire Now

Places to Visit in Goa
Places to Visit in Kerala
Valley of Flowers
Kerela Tourism
South India Tour Packages

Goa Tourism
Rameshwaram Tourism
Tamil Nadu Tourism
Chennai Tourism
Golden Triangle Tour

Vaishno Devi
Rameshwaram
Badrinath
What to See in India

Himalayas
Goa Beaches
Hill Stations
Leh Ladakh

Hill Stations in Tamilnadu
Kodaikanal
India Tour Packages
Leh Ladakh Tour Packages


India Tour Packages
more...
more...
more...
more...
more...
About us | Contact | Booking
Indiasite.com, a trusted name in the travel industry in India caters to all the needs of a tourist coming to India.
Any unauthourised duplication of this site is strictly prohibited and liable to prosecution.
Copyright © : indiasite.com (All rights reserved)