By Radha Venkatesan, IANS
Erode (Tamil Nadu) : As a cold wave sweeps through northern India, faraway in the south a few villages are working overtime to supply thick linen that promises warmth and comfort.
With January temperatures touching one degree Celsius in some northern and central Indian states and dipping below the freezing point in the Himalayan fringe, the demand for cosy, low-cost, jacquard-designed bed sheets made by weavers of Erode in western Tamil Nadu has hit a new high.
“The demand for Erode bed sheets has gone up by 25 percent this winter. In fact, we are unable to meet the demands of our buyers,” R.S. Nataraja Mudaliar, the Erode Cloth Merchants’ Association president, told the IANS.
For a clearer picture of the demand for Erode bed sheets, visit the ‘sandhai’, or weekly market, on the Thiruvengadasamy Street in Erode. Buyers from all over India have flocked to the 10 textile storehouses, which hawk winter bed linen in bulk on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
The master weavers from villages in and around Erode are personally present in these storehouses to take down orders and display their wares.
This winter, buyers came from Raipur in Chhattisgarh and Kanpur in Uttar Pradesh, where the cold wave has claimed scores of lives, besides Delhi, Ahmedabad and Bhopal.
They travelled over 1,000 km all the way down to this south Indian town to buy woven bed linen for two reasons. “These bed sheets are cheap, good and very thick. I have been buying them for several years now,” says Anand Sharma, a trader from Delhi.
A double-spread bed sheet weighing 1,100 grams costs just about Rs. 250. The lesser the weight, the lower the price. A 300 gm sheet in Dobby design would cost around Rs.90 apiece.
Weavers rue that they get only 20 per cent of the prevailing market price. “The prices range between Rs. 20 and Rs. 50 for a bed sheet,” says 60-year-old K. Kuppusamy, who has been weaving bed sheets for the past 30 years at Chennimalai, one of the key weaving clusters in Erode district.
In Chennimalai alone, there are about 1,700 power looms with 5,100 weavers, weaving over 17,000 sheets worth at least Rs. 2.5 million.
Besides, the 7,000 handloom weavers produce at least 15,000 sheets daily.
Each power loom produces about 10 jacquard bed sheets or 20 ordinary Dobby-designed bed sheets every day and the handloom weavers just about manage two sheets daily.
Even the state-owned Erotex, a marketing unit of the weavers’ cooperatives in Erode, which sold bed sheets worth over Rs. 35 million last winter, has run out of stock this year.
“There has been a steep increase in the demand for our bed sheets,” says Erotex Manager, Shanmugham.
Indeed, Erode bed sheets have a long history spanning more than 250 years, when the traditional Tamil weaving community of Mudaliars created weavers’ villages at Chennimalai, Vellakoil and Nathakadaiyur, besides in the neighbouring district of Karur.
The weavers began to specialise in what they initially called the ‘aettu’. As Erode bed sheets caught the attention of north Indians, ‘aettu’ became ‘dupatta’ and now it is the Westernised ‘jacquard sheet’.
Dobby and jacquard designs usually have a single-coloured background with stripes and “raised corded waffles” as the surface highlights. Some of them even have a metallic lustre.
However, weavers claim that the future of Erode bed sheets, despite its growing demand, is not bright and the jacquard may lose its sheen. The reason? “Rising yarn prices – from Rs. 280 per 5 kg, it has grown to Rs. 300 now. It will not allow us to retain the pricing edge.
“Besides, the weavers are also demanding a steep increase in wages from the present 20 percent of the selling price. This year, they went on a month-long strike affecting our production badly,” says Chennimlai Handloom and Powerloom Manufacturers Association president V.N.Swaminathan.
But, as of now, most looms in Erode are frenetically working day and night, making bed sheets to beat the plummeting mercury in up north.