Midnight Garden lumbar pillow front — midnight-blue Gyasar silk with handwoven cypress, palm and lattice motifs in jewel tones
Midnight Garden lumbar pillow front — midnight-blue Gyasar silk with handwoven cypress, palm and lattice motifs in jewel tones
Reverse in warm gold silk with hand-applied piping
Reverse in warm gold silk with hand-applied piping
Detail of zari woven into the Banarasi Gyasar silk, not printed
Detail of zari woven into the Banarasi Gyasar silk, not printed
Close-up of midnight-blue silk texture and hidden zip closure
Close-up of midnight-blue silk texture and hidden zip closure

BANARAS · GYASAR SILK · HANDWOVEN

Midnight Garden Banarasi Lumbar Pillow

$240 USDLimited Edition — 4 Remaining
Free Shipping Duties Covered 30-Day Returns

This item ships in 1–2 business days.

Handwoven in Varanasi in the GI-protected Banarasi tradition, the Midnight Garden is a silk lumbar pillow cover that winds cypresses, climbing palms and fine lattices into the cloth on the loom. A Persian night-garden woven in silk, never printed. The deep midnight-blue ground glows with jewel-tone zari and reverses to a plane of warm gold silk, as if the firefly's light has been spun into silk.

Gyasar is the ceremonial brocade Banaras weavers long made for the Himalayas: pure silk and metallic zari, individually woven in limited numbers — an unforgettable housewarming or wedding gift, and a striking throw pillow cover for your own sofa.

Sold as the cover itself. Pair it with the insert and fill you prefer.

Product Details
  • Origin — Varanasi (Banaras), Uttar Pradesh, India
  • Craft — Handwoven Gyasar (Kimkhab) brocade, the most ornate weave in the Banarasi tradition
  • Heritage — GI-protected Banarasi brocade; the ceremonial Gyasar silk historically woven in Banaras for Himalayan Buddhist textiles
  • Technique — Each motif built into the cloth on a traditional handloom — never printed or power-loomed
  • Material — Pure silk with metallic zari (corrected from "Silk, Viscose")
  • Design — Dual-sided: midnight-blue silk face with woven cypress, palm and lattice motifs in jewel tones; warm gold silk reverse with vermilion piping; hidden zip
  • Size — 14″ × 20″ (36 × 51 cm), rectangular lumbar
  • Edition — Limited edition, individually woven
  • Sold as the cover — pair it with the insert and fill you prefer
Care

Dry clean only to preserve handwoven silk.

Shipping & Returns

Free shipping on all orders to the US & Canada. Duties and taxes covered — no fees on delivery.

Free returns within 30 days. Items must be unused and in original packaging.

Gifting

The Heirloom Experience: Each piece arrives in signature gift packaging befitting its provenance.

Personalization: Complimentary hand-written calligraphy notes and gift invoices are available at checkout.

Global Concierge: Seamless delivery with all duties pre-paid for the US and Canada.

A customer can exchange a gift. For more details, please contact Customer Service.

The Piece

It's a handwoven pure-silk cushion whose pattern is created with metallic zari thread worked directly into the silk on a loom — never printed or applied on top. That construction gives it a luminous, almost three-dimensional surface and a satisfying weight that mass-produced cushions lack. Woven in the Gyasar style of Banarasi brocade, it's a genuine statement piece with centuries of craft behind it — the kind of object that anchors a room and makes an unforgettable gift.

Pure silk, woven with metallic zari thread. The silk gives the cushion its sheen and drape, while the zari forms the luminous, slightly raised brocade pattern and gives the cloth its characteristic weight.

Yes — both faces are finished and display-ready, giving the piece two distinct looks. One side carries the Gyasar brocade panel in full; the reverse offers a complementary design. This double-faced construction is a deliberate choice, not a feature of mass-produced cushions.

Craft & Heritage

Yes, entirely. It's handwoven on a traditional handloom in Varanasi — the pattern is interlaced on the loom itself, not printed, embroidered, or applied afterward. A single panel can take a skilled weaver days to weeks depending on its complexity. Power-loom imitations of Banarasi silk exist and mimic the look, but lack the depth, weight, and thread irregularity of genuine handwoven cloth.

Gyasar is a style of Banarasi brocade from Varanasi, woven in the tradition of Kimkhab — the richest, heaviest category of Indian silk brocade, in which dense metallic zari is woven directly into pure silk. The tradition has roots in the Mughal era and is carried on by master weavers (karigar) whose skills pass down through families over generations.

Zari is metallic thread used in Indian brocade, traditionally fine silver wire wrapped around a silk core. It's what gives Gyasar its shimmer and weight. In this cushion the zari is woven directly into the silk on the loom, so the pattern is structural — part of the cloth itself — rather than embroidered or printed on top, which is what creates its relief-like, three-dimensional quality.

The clearest tell is the back of the cloth: genuine handwoven Banarasi shows loose, irregular thread floats on the reverse, while a power-loom imitation has a uniform, mechanical back. Authentic cloth also has a distinct weight and drape. The counterfeit trade — power-loom Banarasi made in Surat and sold as Varanasi-woven — is widespread, which is exactly why Banarasi silk carries legal protection.

Yes. Banaras Brocades and Sarees hold a Geographical Indication (GI) under Indian law, which restricts the name to silk genuinely woven in the Varanasi region using traditional techniques. This cushion is woven within that protected tradition. The GI exists specifically to defend authentic Banarasi weaving against the flood of power-loom imitations.

Care & Gifting

Dry cleaning is recommended for silk and metallic zari. Keep the cushion out of prolonged direct sunlight, which can fade silk and weaken metallic thread, and avoid machine or hand washing, which can distort the weave and tarnish the zari. Store flat or gently rolled rather than sharply folded. With this care, it will last for decades.

Each cushion is woven in very small runs — there's no factory line, and the weaver's time and the available silk colourways limit how many can exist. Once a colourway is finished or the weaver moves to a new design, it isn't reproduced. Limited edition simply describes the reality of fine handweaving here, not a marketing device.

Beautifully. Banarasi brocade carries centuries of ceremonial significance in India — historically the cloth of weddings, royal courts, and milestones — so it makes a gift with genuine meaning as well as beauty. It ships within 24 hours, arrives gift-ready, and is delivered with duties fully covered for recipients in the US and Canada.

From the Journal

The Alchemy of Light: Discovering the Sacred Heritage of Gyasar Silk

In the quiet hush of a Himalayan monastery, light doesn't just fall upon a surface; it is captured, held, and reflected. This is the work...

Read