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| Home > Marriage Accessories > Jewellery for bride > Jewellery for Body parts
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| | Wedding Jewellery for Body parts
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The Forehead
Bride`s forehead is embellished with tikka/bindi which run on top of both sides of the eye-brows. An ornament is worn along the hairline.
The mang-tikki is worn by brides in most parts of the country. The nose ring, as it is called in English, is only seldom in the shape of a ring. In most places it is usually a small cluster or gems affixed by means of a screw to the nostril.
The Nose
The biggest nose ring is worn by the Dogra brides. Almost three to four inches in diameter it has rubies and pearls strung on it. The gold wire is in a loop shape with encrustations of pearls, garnets and other beads for the Maharashtrian bride and worn on the left side.
The Ears
The ears are bedecked with the karn phul - a gold ornament with a star or radiated center of about an inch in diameter sometimes richly ornamented by precious stones and fixed to the lobe. Jhumka-a bell shaped ornament made of solid gold usually with a row of tiny beads along its edge, is the favorite among the Bengali, Punjabi, Maharashtrian and Rajput brides. A string of pearls is attached to it and taken behind the earlobe to support the weight of the heavy earring.
The Tamilians give importance to the diamond-studded earring, a central stone encircled by smaller ones. Among the Kashmiris a jeroo is an essential part of the bride`s ensemble and duplicates as the mangalsutra. It consists of a long gold chain worn through a hole pierced in the upper ear lobe and having a dangling end of either gold or pearls.
The Neck
The variety of necklaces is bewildering, and brides, especially the affluent, are seen wearing a series of them of differing lengths. There is the collar of gold beads called the paiti by the Maharashtrian, and the parunia ke gulsari- string of pearls; the hansli a choker of gold pieces.
The Punjabis have the rani haar, handed down from mother-in-law to daughter-in-law and consists of pieces of gold attached with a series of chains.
The Maharashtrian also wear the tanmani, three or four strings of pearls with a central pendant, or the typical path where seven or eight strings of pearls are attached to a central green bead.
The Tamilians have their changali in gold but what is imperative is the mangalsutra of two inverted `U` shaped gold pieces called tail with four gold beads strung on a yellow thread.
The Wrist
The bangle or bracelet is the most significant of ornaments for bangles are above all, the visible sign of marriage. The north Indian brides have, among the Punjabis and Dogras, the chura made of a set of white ivory bangles with red ones at either end. On a thin iron bangle in the front are tied a bunch of kaliras-danglers of thin silver or gold. Also common is coconut and some dried fruits and shells tied together by the red sacred thread.
The Rajput bride wears the ichura- a series of plain, ivory bangles starting from the smallest at the wrist and progressively growing larger till the shoulders, covering the entire arm.
The ivory chuda is also worn by the Gujaratis and in addition are the green and red glass bangles or bangri. Green glass is again the colour for the Andhra and Maharashtrian brides. Of course gold bangles also add to the profusely adorned wrists in all parts of India, either as the thin churi or its broader, flatter version or the thick kara with either the elephant or lion heads.
Further up the arm is the bazubandh or armlet-a precious stone-adorned semi-circular trinket with skeins at both ends to tie them in place with.
The Waist
To keep the sari in place as well as accentuate the bride`s slim waist a belt of gold or silver is used. While the Punjabis call it tagari the Tamilians used the odianmam to hold their nine-yard sari in place!
The Ankle
Anklets are either in the form of simple chains of paizeb heavy thick rings of silver set with a fringe of small spherical bells which tinkle at every movement of the limb.
Toe rings - `bichua`, rings worn around the toes, and traditionally attached along each side of the foot, to the paizeb at the ankle.
Among the Maharashtrians it is an elaborate toe-ring with a parrot, peacock or fish design.
The Palms
The palms are covered with an intricate design of mehandi and in the north especially, the application of henna is a special ceremony.
Another popular combination in the north is the haath phool. It consists of five rings in all the fingers, joined to a bangle at the wrist with chains from each ring radiating to a medallion encrusted with stones in the center of the hand, with chains again joining the medallion to the bangle.
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