8 | P a g e
Motifs & Colours
Kashmir is beautiful all the times but
when autumn lights up the poplars in
clean gold and the big chinars burn
red against the dark blue rock
ground, there are few more brilliant,
more breathlessly embracing sights.
The rose, the cypress, the pine, the
nightingale, along with verdure,
water and wine.
Poplars, chenars and cypresses
dominate the scene along with other
trees like the walnut, almond, plum,
apple and cherry. The climate is
temperate and the flora reflects it
The iris, the tulip, the lily, plum,
almond and apple blossoms flourish
along with the lotus, the
pomegranate, of course, the lovely
saffron flower, a field of which seen
in bloom is said to be so beautiful
that it makes the observer burst out
laughing. The colours are there but
they lack the exuberance of the flora
of tropical regions.
All these shapes and colours are,
naturally, reflected in the crafts of
the area. Surrounded by so much of
nature’s bounty the craftsman does
not have to look elsewhere for his
designs. The chenar leaf and the tall,
tapering cypress dominate Kashmir
designs. Among the birds the
kingfisher is a great favourite
followed by the magpie, the parrot,
the woodpecker and the canary.
The designs are always evenly
balanced and even show numerous
flowers, leaves, fine stems and
curving stalks, a sense of restraint is
always evident keeping the
decoration well under control and
never allowing it to overflow the
boundaries of good taste. Shades of
red, pink, blue, yellow, mauve,
green and white are used but these
reflect the natural colours of the
objects depicted and are always
subtly blended to avoid garishness.
The whole effect is flat and
formalized.