The Korvai Technique — What It Is and Why It Matters
Korvai (from the Tamil word for “joining”) is the technique of weaving the body and the border of a saree as two completely separate pieces, then manually interlocking them during the weaving process itself. This is the defining characteristic of an authentic Kanchipuram saree.
How It Works
A Korvai saree requires a three-shuttle loom and typically two weavers: one controlling the body, one controlling the border. The two weavers must move in perfect synchrony — if they fall out of rhythm, the border will not align with the body.
The interlocking happens at the join: a subtle ridge or bump visible on close inspection, running along the length of the saree where body meets border. This is called the Korvai line. It is the maker’s signature, and it is the first thing an experienced buyer examines.
Why It Matters for Durability
When a powerloom or inferior handloom makes a “Kanchipuram-style” saree, the body and border are woven as one continuous piece. The border colour is achieved through the weft (the cross-thread), not a separate structural component.
In a true Korvai saree, the border is structurally independent. The interlocked join is so strong that the saree’s silk body will tear before the border pulls away. This is not possible in a single-piece construction.
How to Identify Korvai at a Glance
Run your finger along the inner edge of the border on the fabric’s reverse side. On a true Korvai saree, you will feel a slight ridge — the interlocked join. On a non-Korvai saree, the back of the border is identical to the body; no ridge, no join, no interlocking.
You can also look for: the border threads will be a visibly different colour on the back of the saree at the join. In powerlooms, the back of the border floats in an even pattern with no structural break.
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