Bengal's Living Textile Heritage

Yuti: Union of Craft and Cloth

Where craft, weavers, and wearers come together — handwoven cloth meets everyday life, and Bengal’s living tradition finds its quiet, modern grace, one thread at a time.

“Handloom is more than fabric;
it is memory, handwoven.”

At Yuti, we believe every handloom carries the warmth of a weaver’s hands, the patience of their craft, and the soul of a culture that stretches back millennia. We are not just a brand; we are custodians of Bengal’s living textile tradition, and we are here to make handloom a part of everyday life.

Our mission is simple but profound: to put pure handloom at the heart of how people dress, not just for special occasions. To bring the looms of Bengal into living rooms across India — and let those who wear our pieces carry a piece of its living story with them.

Authenticity

Every saree is handwoven. No power loom. No compromise. The real thing, always.

Heritage

Rooted in Bengal’s weaving clusters of Phulia and Burdwan — where this art has lived for centuries.

Humanity

Behind each saree are real lives — elderly artisans and women weavers whose craft sustains their families.

Our Story

Born from a love for Bengal's living art

Yuti began not as a business plan but as a belief — that the master weavers of Bengal deserved better than to be forgotten. Antara and Tamojit started with just 2–3 weavers in Phulia, working with cotton sarees and a simple conviction: that authenticity should be accessible.

Nine years later, Yuti is a family of 12 weavers across Phulia and Burdwan, including women artisans who now earn independently through their craft. Every saree we sell is a small act of cultural preservation.

We don’t just sell fabric. We sell the story of hands that refused to let a tradition die.

Yuti @ Exhibitions

Authenticity

Every saree is handwoven. No power loom. No compromise. The real thing, always.

Heritage

Rooted in Bengal’s weaving clusters of Phulia and Burdwan — where this art has lived for centuries.

Humanity

Behind each saree are real lives — elderly artisans and women weavers whose craft sustains their families.