“Serenity” teal, black and cream hand painted lacquer jewelry box

UzbekAlive owes its beginning to hand painted lacquer boxes made of papier-mâché .

The inspiration came around 2000 from Koshib Omonov, Uzbek artist of lacquer painting in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

The first version of UzbekAlive website was entirely devoted to lacquer hand painted boxes. Slowly we expanded into ikat fabrics, ikat pillow covers, silk scarves and other cultural treasures Uzbekistan offers.

Over the years these jewelry boxes have touched many hearts around the world. We have customers who ordered such hand painted jewelry boxes as gifts for their bridesmaids – an artist customized jewelry boxes by writing names of a newlywed couple on the backside of a lid. People in love used our jewelry boxes to propose to their loved ones. Fathers bought our jewelry boxes for their teenage daughters as their first jewelry box. Whatever the occasion these jewelry boxes win hearts with their beauty and intricate details of painting and make unique and unforgettable gifts.

Art by Koshib Omonov is also presented in Hand Painted Barrettes category.

"Neon city lights" lumbar ikat print pillow cover

SKU IP164
$24.99
Last one
In stock: 1 available
Product Details
Fiber content: We don't know exact fiber content of ikat print fabric since it is vintage. The reverse fabric is cotton / silk blend.
Care instructions: Hand wash in cold water is recommended
Dimension (inches): 12" x 24“
Dimension (cm): 31 cm x 61 cm

You are looking at a pillow cover made of a faux-ikat fabric. These fabrics are considered vintage and becoming a rarity. The fabric is an ikat print fabric made in circa 1970-1080 Soviet Uzbekistan.

Soviet faux-ikat print fabric

During the Soviet era ikat artisanal craftsmanship was ceased. Partly because artisanal work was considered to be a private business while the Soviet regime only allowed state owned production. Having a side private business, which generated some extra cash was considered to be a crime by the Soviet law. In addition, industrialization of the economy was one of the main goals of the Soviet state. Banning artisanal craftsmanship was a way to force artisans to join Soviet textile factories.

Simplified ikat print pattern

Ikat print patterns of the Soviet fabrics were significantly simplified. Elaborate detailed work required more time while the goal was to produce more fabrics to satisfy textile needs of the population. Some ikat patterns which existed in early 20th century were lost during the Soviet Union days. They were revived through Western catalogs after 1991 (the year the USSR collapsed).

Machine woven ikat pattern + handloom woven solid green fabric

The faux ikat fabric used for one side of the pilliow cover is machine-woven vintage fabric. The reverse bright green fabric is a handloom woven adras fabric made nowadays. The bright green solid fabric has a beautiful moire pattern.

Fits US lumbar pillow inserts

This ikat print pillow cover closes with an invisible zipper on a side and fits standard 12" x 24" (31cm x 61xm) lumbar pillow inserts which are widely available online.

Shipping

We ship using registered Air Mail, which can be tracked at www.17track.net. In your countries the shipping will be handled by a state postal service. In case of the USA, for example, it is USPS. If you wish that we handle your order using a private carrier (Aramex, DHL or Fedex) please Contact Us.

Returns

We will take anything back in the original condition within a certain period of time. Full returns and refunds policy is here.

Payment

We only accept fast and easy PayPal, which handles all major credit cards.

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"Neon city lights" lumbar ikat print pillow cover