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ARTS
& CRAFTS OF INDIA

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India
has a glorious tradition in toys. The excavations from Harappa and
Mohenjodaro have thrown up a magnificent profusion of clay toys. A
large variety of materials are used for the manufacture of toys and
dolls. Red wood, cow dung, papier-mache, paper and clay are
some of them. Clay toys are made in almost all the states
in folk style. Some are closely connected with seasonal religious
festivals. Almost every region of India is renowned for its
distinctive tradition of toys. One of the oldest and most popular
media for toys has been that of painted and lacquered wood. In
Bihar, the entire story of Shyama Chak festival is related through
clay images. Specially carved red wood
toys, called Tirupati dolls, are made at the pilgrimage
centre of Tirupati in Andhra Pradesh.
Another captivating craft is the leather puppets of Andhra
Pradesh. Interestingly, these are about five feet high, translucent
and dramatically painted in vegetable dyes. Pith or Indian
cork has been used in Assam to make toys and dolls since centuries.
These toys are painted to give them a bright look. All kinds of
traditional toys carry a deep stamp of the true Indian
characteristics. The rattle and its variant dugg duggi is the
most common of rural toys along with the wooden cart, lakdi ki
katti.The Rajasthani stuffed toys are made from old clothes and fabric
Although
most of the toys are made to amuse children, some of them are used
as crafts. The toys of
Kondapalli (Krishna district) and Ettikoppaka (Vishakapatnam
district) in Andhra Pradesh and the lacquered wooden toys of
Chennapatna, Mysore are the best specimens.
The Kondapalli toys are made from soft wood called ponki,
which is treated with boiled tamarind juice and lime paste. The most
famous of the Kondapalli toys is the Ambari elephant. Nirmal,
Tirupati and Tiruchanur are other important toy making centres in
Andhra Pradesh. |

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