From the looms of Bengal to your wardrobe—pure handwoven fabrics, crafted by master artisans. No shortcuts. No mass production. Only the skilled hands of weavers whose knowledge has been shaped over generations.
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Rooted in Bengal's centuries-old handloom tradition. Every piece carries that heritage.
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Our sarees are handwoven by Bengal's weaving communities — no machines, no middlemen.
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Limited runs, natural dyes, zero shortcuts. Made slowly, on purpose.
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.
Every piece is handwoven. No power loom. No compromise. Pure handloom, made the way it should be.
Rooted in Bengal’s weaving clusters — where this craft has lived for centuries, and continues to evolve.
Behind each piece are real lives — women weavers and artisans, sustaining families and tradition.
Rooted in Bengal’s weaving clusters — where this craft has lived for centuries, and continues to evolve.
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.
Our Story
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.
In the village of Phulia, tucked into the green heartland of Nadia district, there are families where the loom is not a tool — it is a language. Passed from grandparents to children to grandchildren, the art of weaving has never needed a school because the home itself was the classroom.
Yuti works closely with these families — elderly master weavers who carry within them patterns and techniques that exist nowhere in writing, and women who have turned their skill into their strength, earning their own livelihoods while keeping a 5000-year-old tradition alive.
“When I weave, I do not count the threads. I feel them.”
— Rekha Devi · Weaver, Phulia · 34 years of craft
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Each saree is a living piece of heritage — woven by hand, worn with grace.