'Varna' Wooden Napkin Holder in Printed Wood and Resin
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Etymology
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Provenance
The Varna napkin holder belongs to the North Indian tradition of decorative woodware — a practice of treating shaped wooden forms with colour and surface ornament to produce objects that are functional and decorative in equal measure. The holder takes the form of a low rectangular frame: wood body, surface-printed with pattern and sealed under resin, metal fittings completing the construction. The technique comes from workshops in Delhi NCR and western Uttar Pradesh, where artisans adapt the vocabulary of India's painted and lacquered woodwork traditions to contemporary domestic forms.
The surface print on Varna carries a bold multicolour ornamental vocabulary. Varna in Sanskrit names colour itself — not a specific hue but the quality of colour as presence, the expressive charge a surface carries when actively ornamented. The same tradition of treating a functional object as an opportunity for surface pattern runs from the painted lac-ware boxes of Rajasthan to the printed woodware of contemporary North Indian workshops: the domestic object understood as deserving the same attention as the ceremonial one.
The waterproof resin surface makes the holder suited to everyday table use. Each piece is individually handcrafted; print placement and colour tone may vary slightly between pieces as a natural feature of the process.
Disclaimer
- These pieces are handcrafted in wood with a printed and resin-sealed surface. Variations in tone and colour are a natural feature of the process.
- Minor differences in print registration should be understood as the signature of individual craft, not a defect.
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