A Pattern with Two Names
There is a teardrop-shaped ornament that appears on neckties, bandanas, scarves, wallpaper, and clothing all over the world. Most people call it the Paisley pattern, after a town in Scotland. Almost nobody knows that it was invented in Kashmir.
This is the story of how it travelled.
The Keri Motif
The original design is called Keri in Kashmiri — a stylised representation of a mango or a curving leaf. It has been a central element of Kashmiri textile design for centuries, woven into shawls on Kani looms and embroidered with Sozni needlework.
The Keri was not random decoration. In Kashmiri visual culture, it carried associations with fertility, abundance, and the natural world. Each master designer developed their own variations, and the most complex Kani shawls could incorporate dozens of Keri motifs in intricate, interlocking arrangements.
How It Reached Europe
Kashmiri shawls arrived in European markets through East India Company traders in the 17th and 18th centuries. They became enormously fashionable among the European aristocracy — particularly after Napoleon sent several back to France as gifts.
European demand soon exceeded what Kashmiri workshops could supply. Textile manufacturers in Britain and France saw an opportunity and began producing machine-woven imitations. The Scottish town of Paisley became the largest centre of this imitation industry — and eventually, the motif itself became known by the town's name rather than by its Kashmiri origin.
What Was Lost in Translation
The European copies reproduced the general shape of the Keri, but they could not reproduce the context. A genuine Kashmiri Kani shawl with Keri motifs might take a year to weave. Each colour was carried by its own individual bobbin. The pattern was read from a coded manuscript. The result was a textile of extraordinary complexity and subtlety.
The factory imitations were flat, uniform, and quick. They were recognisably similar in outline but entirely different in substance. Like a photograph of a painting — technically accurate, but missing everything that made the original valuable.
Reclaiming the Origin
Today, we think it is worth remembering where the pattern came from. Not out of grievance, but out of respect for the people who created it — and who still create it, using the same techniques, in the same workshops, in the same narrow lanes of Srinagar.
When you see a Keri motif on a Kani shawl from The Kashmir Weaver, you are seeing the real thing — not a copy of a copy, but the original, made by the inheritors of the tradition that started it all.



