Every shawl at Kanishawls is woven in Kanihama village, Budgam district, Kashmir — the historical heartland of Kani weaving — and carries a verifiable GI certification tag. We supply wholesale buyers, boutiques, and importers worldwide with pieces that come with full authentication documentation, so you can prove provenance to your own customers.

🏅 GI Certified since 2008
🏔️ Kanihama, Kashmir — verified origin
📜 Talim reference included per piece
📦 MOQ 10 pieces · ships to 40+ countries

The four Kani collections

Our range is organised into four categories reflecting the weaving technique, fibre grade, and design complexity of each type. All four carry GI certification and are sourced directly from our partner workshops in Kanihama.

GI Certified Premium
Pashmina Kani Shawls
The pinnacle of our range. Woven in finest-grade Pashmina (14–16 micron) using the traditional kani stick loom. Each shawl takes 6–12 months and carries master-level talim design coding.
Fibre 14–16µ Pashmina Time 6–12 months Colours 8–25
₹15,000 – ₹60,000 per piece (retail benchmark)
Enquire wholesale ›
GI Certified Collector Grade
Jamawar Kani Shawls
Full-coverage grand designs with 20–50 colours covering the entire shawl surface. The most prestigious category in Kani weaving. 12–18 months production, master-weaver attributed.
Fibre Finest Pashmina Time 12–18 months Colours 20–50+
₹60,000 – ₹2,00,000+ per piece (retail benchmark)
Enquire wholesale ›
GI Certified Entry–Mid
Wool Kani Shawls
Hand-woven in fine Merino or Kashmir wool. GI-certified pieces at a more accessible price point — ideal for volume wholesale buyers introducing Kani to new markets.
Fibre Fine Merino / Wool Time 3–8 months Colours 6–18
₹5,000 – ₹18,000 per piece (retail benchmark)
Enquire wholesale ›
GI Certified Bespoke
Collector & Bespoke Kani
Commissioned pieces with exclusive custom talim designs. Master-weaver attribution, full provenance dossier, and exclusive design rights for the commissioning buyer.
Fibre Finest Pashmina Lead time 9–18 months MOQ 1 piece
Price on enquiry — design consultation included
Begin a commission ›

Jamawar Kani — the heirloom standard

How we source — from talim to your door

Understanding our sourcing process helps wholesale buyers explain authenticity to their own customers. Every piece in our range follows this documented chain from weaver to buyer.

1

Design begins with the talim

A talim master translates the visual design into a coded notation system — a sheet of symbolic instructions for every single thread movement. The talim is the "score" from which the weaver works; no two talim are identical. We retain the talim reference code for every piece in our range.

2

Hand-weaving at Kanihama workshops

Our partner workshops are located in Kanihama village — historically known as the birthplace of Kani weaving in Kashmir. Weavers work on traditional ground looms, managing dozens of wooden tojis (bobbins) simultaneously. Each workshop is registered with the GI authority.

3

Quality inspection and GI tagging

Every completed piece is inspected against our 7-point authentication standard — reverse weave, floating thread length, imperfection signature, fibre burn test, drape, and weight. Pieces that pass receive their GI certification tag with a unique, verifiable registration number.

4

Documentation package prepared

Each piece is paired with its documentation package: GI certification number, workshop name and district, talim design reference, fibre grade certificate, and weaver attribution where applicable. This package travels with the piece through the supply chain.

5

Wholesale dispatch to 40+ countries

Orders are packed and dispatched with full export documentation. Wholesale buyers receive the piece, the documentation package, and (on request) photography assets suitable for retail use. We ship to boutiques, department stores, and importers across Europe, North America, the Middle East, and Asia.

A Kani shawl without a traceable talim is a shawl without a birth certificate. We supply both — because the story of how a piece was made is part of what makes it worth owning.

Full specification comparison

Use this table to select the right category for your market, customer base, and price positioning. All four categories carry GI certification.

Specification Pashmina Kani Jamawar Kani Wool Kani Bespoke Kani
Fibre grade 14–16 micron Pashmina 12–14 micron Pashmina Fine Merino / Kashmir wool Client-specified (typically 12–16µ)
Weaving time 6–12 months 12–18 months+ 3–8 months 9–18 months (design-dependent)
Colour count 8–25 colours 20–50+ colours 6–18 colours Custom (up to 60+)
Design coverage Borders + central field Full-body (Jamawar) Borders + motifs Custom specification
GI certification ✓ Included ✓ Included ✓ Included ✓ Included
Talim reference ✓ Included ✓ Included ✓ Included ✓ Custom talim
Weaver attribution On request ✓ Standard Not standard ✓ Master-weaver
Design exclusivity Catalogue designs Catalogue designs Catalogue designs ✓ Exclusive rights
Retail benchmark ₹15,000–60,000 ₹60,000–2,00,000+ ₹5,000–18,000 Price on enquiry
Wholesale MOQ 10 pieces 5 pieces 10 pieces 1 piece
Photography assets On request ✓ Included On request ✓ Included

Wholesale pricing note: The retail benchmarks above reflect typical Indian and international retail prices. Wholesale pricing from Kanishawls is structured to allow healthy retail margins. Contact us via the enquiry form for a wholesale price list tailored to your order volume and category mix.

Frequently asked questions

We supply four categories: Pashmina Kani shawls (14–16 micron fibre, 6–12 months weaving), Jamawar Kani shawls (full-body designs, 20–50 colours, 12–18 months production), Wool Kani shawls (fine Merino or Kashmir wool, more accessible price point), and Collector & Bespoke Kani (commissioned pieces with custom talim designs and master-weaver attribution). All four categories are GI-certified and sourced directly from Kanihama workshops.

Yes. Every piece we supply carries a verifiable Geographical Indication (GI) certification tag with a unique registration number. This certification confirms that the shawl was made in Kashmir using traditional Kani hand-weaving methods. We include the GI documentation with every wholesale order so buyers can provide authenticated provenance to their retail customers. If you need to verify a tag number, we can direct you to the official GI registry.

Our standard minimum order quantity (MOQ) is 10 pieces for Pashmina Kani and Wool Kani, and 5 pieces for Jamawar Kani. Bespoke commissions can be ordered from a single piece. We supply up to 500+ pieces for importers, department stores, and boutique chains. Contact us to discuss custom MOQ arrangements for mixed orders across categories.

A Jamawar Kani shawl is the most prestigious and complex category of Kani weaving. "Jamawar" derives from Persian: jama (body garment) and war (full coverage), meaning the design covers the entire shawl surface in continuous interlocking pattern — as opposed to border-and-field designs. Jamawar pieces typically use 20–50 colours and require 12–18 months or longer to produce. They are considered collector-grade and heirloom-quality textiles. All Jamawar pieces at Kanishawls carry GI certification and master-weaver attribution.

Yes. We work with master weavers and talim designers in Kanihama to produce commissioned pieces with entirely custom designs. Bespoke commissions include exclusive design rights for the commissioning buyer — meaning your design cannot be sold to other buyers. We provide a full provenance dossier including the custom talim, master-weaver attribution, and GI certification. Lead times are typically 9–18 months depending on complexity. Contact us via the wholesale enquiry form to discuss a commission.

All shawls are woven in Kanihama village in the Budgam district of Kashmir, India — historically considered the birthplace of Kani weaving, where the craft has been practised for over 500 years. Every piece is traceable to its specific workshop and weaver district, as documented in our provenance package. This traceability is part of what distinguishes our supply chain from importers sourcing from undocumented intermediaries.

Kani shawls — particularly Pashmina Kani — require gentle care to preserve the fibre and the weave. The key principles: hand-wash only in cold water with a gentle shampoo or specialist Pashmina wash; never machine-wash or dry-clean; dry flat on a towel away from direct heat; store folded with cedar blocks or lavender sachets to deter moths. For complete guidance, see our full Kani shawl care and maintenance guide.