Only natural plant-based ingredients are used for dyeing, which causes no environmental pollution. Before they are dyed, the yarns or fabrics are well scoured to remove natural oils, and dipped in a mordant bath, with the exception of indigo, which does not require any mordant. A variety of plant-based products are used to dye the yarn or fabric: Indigofera tinctoria for indigo blue, Acacia catechu for shades of brown, Terminalia chebula (harda) and Punica granatum (pomegranate rind) for yellow, and Onosma echioides (kasimi) for grey, and non-toxic alizarin for red, and the dyers have standardised the processes of colour fastness.
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The Malkha fabric becomes softer, more absorbent and comfortable to wear with every wash, and has a low carbon footprint. Many designers and high-end retailers working with handcrafted textiles are using this fabric in India and abroad. The fabric is currently exported to Italy, France, Norway, the UK and the USA. This wonderful initiative needs to be expanded to benefit larger sections of farmers, weavers and all artisans involved in this supply chain. It is an eco-friendly means of production with the possibility of preserving indigenous varieties of cotton, which is good for the soil and for the user, preserves the diversity of both raw material and techniques of weaving, and has the potential for creating a large number of jobs within the region. Malkha has become more than a mere quality of cotton fabric. It is fundamentally rooted in scaling up sustainable, eco-friendly formats of processing cotton and yarn, and seeks the ultimate goal of linking producers directly to buyers.