Description
This embroidered textile artifact represents the traditional domestic craft practices of South Asia during the 1990s. Developed on a lightweight plain-weave cotton fabric, the piece features repetitive floral vine motifs created through hand embroidery techniques.
The embroidery combines red, burgundy, cream, and green threads to produce decorative floral compositions commonly found in household textiles, garments, dowry items, and cultural decorative pieces of the late twentieth century.

Technical Analysis
- Lightweight plain-weave cotton construction
- Hand-controlled satin stitch embroidery
- Multi-tone thread shading for floral depth
- Repetitive ornamental floral vine layout
- Raised embroidery texture through layered stitch density

Condition Report
The textile shows moderate age-related creasing and slight discoloration due to oxidation and long-term storage conditions. Embroidery structure remains stable with minimal thread loss.
Curatorial Significance
This artifact preserves evidence of pre-digital embroidery craftsmanship and reflects the cultural identity, domestic artisan practices, and decorative textile traditions of South Asia. It serves as an important research reference for textile conservation, material culture, and embroidery history.


