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Useless Writing

Musings about everyday stuff that range from the weird to the inspiring.

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Friday, January 18, 2013
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 14:44 PM IST

Kalamkari is a textile art; you could also define it as a style of painting on fabric; yet its basic techniques such as the resist wax process are not unlike those used in batik. On its very own, Kalamkari is a different art tradition – distinctive, detailed and any specimen a result of a painstakingly long chain of elaborate efforts. The name given to this style is deceptively simple – ‘Kalamkari’, ‘the work of the pen’, as it literally translates.

Let us examine the inspirations and influences of this art, practiced as it is in Machilipatnam (or, Masulipatnam) and Srikalahasti in Andhra Pradesh, India. At one time, both these places may have shared a common tradition; in fact Machilipatnam as the older site seems to have inspired the beginnings of the Kalamkari tradition in Srikalahasti. However, there has always been a difference in the design concepts of these two places. Whereas Srikalahasti is famous for its religious friezes depicting events from the two great Hindu epics – the Ramayana and the Mahabharata; Machilipatnam also produced the very elegant ‘Tree of Life’. The reasons for these variations are not difficult to discover for the locations of these two sites has played an important role in determining the evolution of their Kalamkari traditions.

Machilipatnam was since centuries a thriving port city on the eastern coast of the subcontinent until Visakhapatnam overtook it in importance. Srikalahasti on the other hand is a famous temple town thronged by pilgrims. It is also very close to Tirumala – Tirupati, the most important holy shrine in the whole of South India, and is therefore part of the beaten route temple track. Also, the distance of nearly 350 km between Machilipatnam and Srikalahasti has ensured that the Kalamkari traditions of both these centers have evolved independent of each other, thus each centre has a distinctive style of its own, even though interaction of influences has definitely taken place.

Being an important port-of-call, Machilipatnam was better equipped to assimilate influences from other lands; also, it was more receptive than Srikalahasti to the changes in the fields of both technique and design – it is interesting to note that there are many Persian carpet motifs to be found in Machilipatnam Kalamkaris. Since Machilipatnam exported its Kalamkaris to various countries, it catered to the specialized requirements in design for a particular region.

The Srikalahasti market presented a completely different scene. Religious friezes depicting the many deities of the Hindu pantheon found favor with the Srikalahasti artisans since these found a ready indigenous market in the pilgrims who come here. Here kalamkaris are seen as objects of reverence rather than those of utility. They are hung in puja-rooms and are of the same class as the Nathdwara picchwais or the Jagannath Puri pattachitras. Superb specimens of such kalamkaris can be found in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and the Salarjung Museum, Hyderabad.

Let us now discover what is it that goes into the making of a single kalamkari piece? It is significant to note that only vegetable and no chemical dyes are used as the coloring agents in the kalamkari tradition. These dyes provide the brilliant, rustic look to the finished product, so typical of a kalamkari specimen. The main basic colors which predominate any kalamkari are black, red, yellow and blue. Other colors such as the earthy red, brown and green are achieved as a result of over-dyeing; for example, green being effected by the result of dyeing yellow over blue.

The grey kora cloths traditionally used in kalamkari are first soaked overnight in a solution of sheep or buffalo dung, dissolved in water. It is interesting to note that a solution of cattle dung rather than a chemical bleaching powder is used to obtain the bleached effect. After the bleaching is completed, the fabric is thoroughly washed in a flowing stream or river. After drying in the sun, it is to be soaked in a solution of the myrobalam (tannin) fruit in water. Great care is taken to ensure that the juice of myrobalam penetrates the cloth completely as this solution provides the base without which the black color in a design would fail to develop.

Now the cloth is ready for the outlining of the main design. In Machilipatnam, blocks come handy to print the outlines –they save a lot of time apart from giving the finished material a professional look. However, in Srikalahasti, the entire outline work is done by the kalam, or the pen in a style that has remained unchanged since ages – these kalams are made locally with balls of yarn tied around a bamboo stylus which forms a point at one end. The yarn soaks the color or the dye and the skilled artisans dexterously manipulates it to release the right amount of the pigment from the yarn to achieve a uniformly thick or thin line that constitutes the outline. These outlines are now marked freehand. Thus each Srikalahasti kalamkari is a singular piece of art which can never be replicated. Machilipatnam kalamkaris on the other hand can be mass produced.

The kalams or in other instances, the blocks are saturated with the required amount of an iron acetate (kasim) solution and the tracings are transferred using these onto the fabric. The kalams can be used as earlier described, whereas blocks are easily stamped over the surface of the prepared cloth to leave an imprint of the required design.

Next, using alum (karam) solution, which acts as a mordant for the color red, the desired areas are colored in more or less the same fashion as before. The cloths are now kept aside for two or three days to allow proper fixation, after which they are washed again in flowing water. Now these are ready for a dip in the color cauldron.

A vegetable dye made from leaves and roots is now prepared. Mainly jajakku leaves and the root of the madder are boiled in water to obtain their natural coloring pigments. The traced cloths are now dipped into and saturated with this dye solution. Vibrant and myriad shades of red, vermilion, black, brown and sienna are obtained after the dip due to simple variations in techniques. Only the areas covered with the mordants are fixed; in other parts the coloring is a temporary phenomenon. The cloths are again thoroughly washed in flowing water. The cattle dung bleaching procedure is repeated once more and the unfixed areas regain their neutral colors. This stage is an important point in the complete kalamkari process. Nowadays, quite often, the process can end here. However, most kalamkaris undergo further dyeing in both yellow and blue before they can be classified as completed.

If the process is to continue, a starch is prepared from boiled rice water and buffalo milk. This is applied on the cloth to make it stiff and to whiten the neutral areas. Beeswax is melted and then applied using the kalam onto the portions where the next color, i.e. blue is not to penetrate. In this particular stage, the similarities between batik and kalamkari are outstanding. It cannot be disregarded that at one time, batik in Indonesia and kalamkari in Machilipatnam may have influenced each other. In fact, at that time, Machilipatnam was on many of the important trade routes that traversed the Bay of Bengal. Modern day batik uses the mixture of paraffin wax and beeswax and it is to their combined use that it owes its characteristic crackle finish. This crackle finish is absent in kalamkari due to the use of pure beeswax.

Coming back to the process of the kalamkari, after the wax has dried over the cloth, the cloth is dipped into an indigo dye, which imparts the color blue to the kalamkari. The cloths are now fully dried in the sun and then the entire beeswax is removed from them by dipping the cloth into boiling water which melts out the wax from its surface. This wax can be reused again.

The bleaching and then the starching process has to be done all over again. It is this laborious procedure of so many steps that makes the evolution of a kalamkari piece such an exclusive heritage. Altogether, about fifteen various procedures are involved in completing a single kalamkari specimen.

After the cloths have been re-starched, they are ready for a dip in the yellow dye. The yellow color is imparted to the dye by boiling myrobalam flowers in water. On coming into contact with the yellow dye, the blues turn green and the reds turn into vermilion. However, the blues can be retained by covering the blue areas with melted beeswax, which after dipping in the yellow dye and consequently drying is removed in the same way as explained earlier. In many instances, a dip into the final yellow dye may not be required, since it is left to the imagination of the artisan and finally to the choice of the customers, who may prefer monochromatic shades and color schemes.

The choice of further bleaching the cloth yet again in the dung solution is also optional. Bleaching provides a white background, but many people seem to prefer the fawn colored background attained by omitting the bleaching process in the final stage.

Contemporary kalamkari differs in a few ways from the traditional kalamkari. Today’s artisans are more open to subtle changes in the process thus attaining a spectrum of varied effects. This presents a completely changed scenario in comparison to times not so long ago when it was considered almost sacrilegious to make even a slight variation in the procedure. This added flexibility provides fresh business acumen to the artisans as well. Much of this change was achieved by the efforts of a few dedicated people and the cooperative societies formed by the artisans. However, it would be premature to opine that kalamkari has finally come of age and can withstand pressures from elsewhere. In recent years, screen printed kalamkari prints using chemical dyes have invaded the market. These identical specimens of the same mimeograph have neither the freshness nor the vitality of the original. Original kalamkaris need to be marketed as exclusive designer products. All these years, the kalamkari tradition has been accorded the run-of-the-mill status rather than exclusivity. Efforts in the right direction include the introduction of kalamkari table covers and mats, furnishings, dress materials, etc. Also the traditional religious friezes today adorn living rooms and corporate interiors apart from their rightful places in the puja rooms.

At one time, there used to be tents made for royal entourages from kalamkari cloths; also kalamkari friezes were used as educational visuals. Whether these uses can be received seems to be a very poor and remote possibility indeed. Also, whether various steps being taken are taking kalamkari in the right direction is uncertain to state; but, yes, it can be surely said that they are providing a new vision to the once-dying craft of kalamkari.

Finally, it is true about kalamkari like it is true about any other craft tradition; that to be constantly evolving is to survive, and to be stagnant in perfection can be suicidal.

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Saturday, January 12, 2013
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 9:17 AM IST

The Pad Thai you get in Bangkok, or even in most Thai restuarants around the world is almost always not vegan or vegetarian — it may contain fish sauce, egg, and shrimps. This is a vegan recipe that tastes awesome. Some ingredients may not be available locally — in that case, you will have to substitute and play around to see what works.

Ingredients:

375 grams (13 oz) Rice Stick noodles (5 mm)
2 tbsp tamarind paste (or sufficient fresh tamarind squeezed in fresh water)
4 tbsp demerara sugar
2 tbsp Golden Mountain Sauce (use Soya sauce as substitute)
1 tsp red chilli powder
2 tbsp peanuts
2 onions, chopped fine
1 green capsicum (pepper), chopped fine
10 heads of Pak Choy, chopped fine
1 inch piece of galangal, grated
2 green chillis, chopped fine
6 cloves garlic, crushed
2 kafir lime leaves
100 gms tofu
2 cups moong bean sprouts
2 tbsp Soya Sauce
2 tbsp tomato ketchup
Oil to fry
Salt to taste
Fresh cilanto / corriander leaves, chopped

Method:

  1. Boil enough water to soak your Rice Stick noodles. Switch off the heat and soak noodles for 5 to 10 minutes so that your noodles are soft, yet crunchy enough — not entirely cooked. Drain into a collander and wash with cold water — keep aside.
  2. Mix tamarind paste, demerara sugar, red chilli powder, Golden Mountain Sauce, and a quarter cup water until sugar is dissolved. Keep aside.
  3. Roast peanuts, cool them, and grind them very coarsely. Keep aside.
  4. Cut tofu into 1 cm cubes, and fry in hot oil. Keep aside.
  5. Heat 3 tbsp oil in a heavy bottomed pan and wait until it is hot. Add onion, garlic, galangal, green chilli, kafir lime leaves, and cook for 2-3 minutes — or until the onion is a little translucent, yet crunchy. Keep tossing.
  6. Add 2 tbsp oil, and add Pak Choy and cook for a minute. Keep tossing.
  7. Add 1 tbsp oil, and add capsicum and moong bean sprouts, tomato ketchup, and cook for another 2-3 minutes. Keep tossing all the while.
  8. Add the Pad Thai paste, and cook until it boils. Let cook for a minute or two, and add the ground peanuts and tofu pieces. Add salt to taste as required — it’s best you add little salt since the Golden Mountain Sauce has its own salt content. Don’t worry about this being salty enough for the Rice Stick noodles you have not added yet because we still need to add Soya Sauce — and that will add more salt. So err on the side of slightly less salt for now.
  9. Add the Rice Stick noddles, and toss well. Add soya sauce and cook for 2-3 minutes. Taste if the salt is sufficient — add more if required. If the chilli content is less, sprinkle some red chilli powder and toss well.
  10. Sprinkle fresh chopped corriander, toss well and cook for another minute, and serve.

Filed Under: Thai_Food
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Saturday, November 19, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 4:27 AM IST

Sitting down under an imaginary tree at noon time, with nothing to do, I feel completely useless — and funnily enough extremely busy at the same time! Where is the time to do everything I ever wanted to do — let me start by counting the leaves on the very tree under whose shade I am sitting! Oops, did I not say that this was an imaginary tree? So I guess I can imagine the number of leaves? Will 2 million, 2 hundred thousand, 6 hundred, and 22 be good enough a number — and do you believe me?

OK, so you believe me — that’s reason enough for me to believe myself. If you do not believe me, why not go and count them yourself — I won’t mind if you come up with a new number — after all, as I told you within the title of this post, life is extremely busy!

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Thursday, November 17, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 13:53 PM IST

Just found an email in my inbox from one of those stock photo providers — they have already started publicizing their Christmas collection. Their timing makes so much sense — after all those who need Christmas themed stock images for their electronic or printed content are watching out for these mails! Unfortunately, I am not really watching out for these mails because they do not give me the boring satisfaction that I desire.

But this one was different — they probably designed this mailer for people like me who loved getting bored with irrelevant stars splashed over a red canvas in broad daylight! Now is that what you would call Christmas? For some reason, we tend to associate Christmas with stars on a night sky that’s almost so dark blue in color that it may seem black. The stars twinkle across this dark canvas and evoke a Christmasy feeling.

Enough of this red or blue discussion — for now let me think of Christmas star gazing — does it even make sense? What do you think about it?

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Thursday, November 17, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 5:07 AM IST

What does one fish say to the other fish when they encounter each other swimminig from opposite directions? Other than the fact that we are not sure if their eyes face in the front (they do look sidewards!), would they talk about the temperature of the water? Or if any predators are closeby? Now we do not know fish language, or even if they can talk — but scientists are sure that they do communicate with each other.

That brings up the interesting topic of fish communications. If I wanted to make a career on this wonderful, uncommon subject, where should I get started? Maybe I could:

  1. Talk to the oceanography department — that does sound logical enough. I could just go and meet the director and ask him to help me get started with a research grant for fish communications.
  2. Go online and research — that sounds even better, maybe I could end up being the moderator of a Facebook group on fish communications. People would be convinced that I am an expert in the topic, and someday fish communicating with us could also use Facebook!
  3. Wait for the fish to find me — it is plausible that the pioneers of the fish world are looking for a way to decipher human communications. Soon enough they will discover me as a denizen!

Filed Under: Ambitions, Useless

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Monday, October 31, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 10:10 AM IST

Think of green glass laid over a solid colored, yellow, textured paper. And then place a red colored spotlight over the surface. Even better — imagine this effect in a dark room with not too much light in the first place!

Why do different colors juxtapose so well when laid across each other — especially when the medium is different as in glass, paper, or light? Yet how many of us have the time to explore supposedly useless activity like the one I just described? We often drift into a world of mechanical routine, almost each time we attempt to do something different.

Maybe that’s the reason why the wise have said that there is little difference between the eccentric and the intellectual — maybe they were not wise at all to come up with such a conclusion, or they may have been. Or they may have been as undecided as I am today — living between two worlds?

Let me look again at that green glass — this time I’m going to place the paper above the glass and then precariously let me lift them both together with my left hand. The right hand now conveniently picks up the red spotlight and throws a glow onto them from below. Ouch — my left arm lost its balance and the paper and the glass both fell off my hands. The paper has some scratch marks and the glass is broken into so many pieces that I can almost see powdered glass. The sound was mesmerizing — I mean the sound of the glass falling to the ground, and the red light seems to almost awaken me from my sleep, and a strange dream!

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Thursday, October 13, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 7:48 AM IST

I spoke about my non-ambitions in the previous post — and I did say that I am going to share one of my secret ambitions soon — so here it is!

Bottle alt

I have always had one ambition – and that was to be a bottle collector. What exactly is a bottle collector? I espoused three theories:

  1. Someone who was drunk every day, and never threw away the empty bottles. One room in the house was full of the alcohol bottles that seemed to reflect in myriad hues as light spilled in from the window.

  2. Someone who begged others for empty bottles and colored them all day with glass paints so that they appeared magical when held against light.

  3. Someone who roamed around the woods, collected insects, and saved them inside bottles that had caps with tiny holes so that the insects could breathe. Of course there was plenty of grass and mud in those bottles to form a tiny ecosystem.

Now that you know what a bottle collector is, I’ll tell you about some of my other ambitions in successive posts. Have a great, useless day — go enjoy!

Filed Under: Ambitions, Useless

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Thursday, October 13, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 7:45 AM IST

This is awesome, and I know that the way to do this might not be the way I am doing it now but still that does not help. I have the uncontrollable urge to go and do things I have never done before like collect dew with eyedroppers in a bottle! OK, I collected less than a teaspoon of dew in an hour and even that seemed to evaporate faster than I thought. Along with the dew, I also ended up collecting some leaf tissue that showed quite well even without a microscope. All this seems to encourage my dreams to become a botanist. Of course, being a botanist was not the only dream I ever had. I also wanted to become an artist, a pathologist, a hair stylist, a cook, and an astronaut in my previous dreams. Outside my dreams, I had no ambitions; I was quite happy with things the way they were.

OK — I admit I had an ambition — and I’ll talk about it in the next useless post.

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Wednesday, October 12, 2011
posted by Suspiciously Useless at 1:00 AM IST

Useless Writing is about writing useless stuff in a not-so-useless style. It’s not the often-encountered jargon text, where something unimportant suddenly sounds so significant! It is also not a repackaging of old wine in new bottles, since at Useless Writing, there is no content to repackage! Finally, Useless Writing is not conceptualized as a boring collection of silly essays that you can read on a lazy, summer afternoon.

About Us - Silly GirlUseless Writing is more — it is elevating the useless to an art form — so that you don’t think it is important. You realize this is all more akin to something stupid, but yet the essays are intelligent in their own way. It’s like someone getting drenched in the rain just because they enjoy that feeling — without worrying if others find that stupid!

So welcome to Useless Writing — hopfully you will find this time usefully spent!

On an end note, if you want to know more about who we are, where we are based, and anything else — just head over to Indezine’s About Us page. Indezine is our parent company’s page and this blog belongs to them. Thank you for visiting us — and have a fantastic, useful day reading some useless stuff!

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