Textile designer who married into a maharaja's family brings back Mughal patterns

It was Brigitte Singh's father-in-law, a major collector of Rajasthan miniatures, who gave her the Mughal-era poppy cloth connected to Shah Jahan.
Indian naturalized textile designer Brigitte Singh (R) watches as a worker uses the hand block printing technique on a cotton fabric at her workshop in in Amber, Rajasthan. (Photo | AFP)
Indian naturalized textile designer Brigitte Singh (R) watches as a worker uses the hand block printing technique on a cotton fabric at her workshop in in Amber, Rajasthan. (Photo | AFP)

'Magic potion'

A few months after arriving, Singh was introduced to a member of the local nobility who was related to the maharaja of Rajasthan. They married in 1982.

At first, Singh still hoped to try her hand at miniature painting.

But after scouring the city for traditional paper to work on, she came across workshops using block printing.

"I fell into the magic potion and could never go back," she told AFP.

She started by making just a few scarves, and when she passed through London two years later, gave them as presents to friends who were connoisseurs of Indian textiles.

Bowled over, they persuaded her to show them to Colefax and Fowler, the storied British interior decorations firm.

"The next thing I knew, I was on my way back to India with an order for printed textiles," she said.

Since then, she has never looked back.

'Soul comfort'

For the next two decades, she worked with a "family of printers" in the city before building her own studio in nearby Amber -- a stone's throw from Jaipur's famous fort.

It was her father-in-law, a major collector of Rajasthan miniatures, who gave her the Mughal-era poppy cloth connected to Shah Jahan.

Her reproduction of that print was a huge success the world over, proving especially popular with Indian, British and Japanese clients.

In 2014, she made a Mughal poppy print quilted coat, called an Atamsukh -- meaning "comfort of the soul" -- that was later acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Another piece of her work is in the collection of the Metropolitan Art Museum in New York.

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