Julie Kagti was only seven when she learned to weave from her Assamese grandmother. Every afternoon, post-lunch, Aita would set up her backstrap loom in the verandah to keep an eye on the salted vegetables and fruits drying in the sun. This became story time—Aita would captivate Kagti with tales about her childhood , simultaneously teaching her how to warp, make a graph and translate it into a weave.

Transfixed, seven-year-old Kagti learned how to work the loom even as her grandmother’s stories wove an unbreakable bond between them. Years later, it was the fondness with which she looked back on these afternoons that pushed Kagti to study textile design. Having pursued tapestry weaving alongside teaching textile design and running a boutique travel company that curates localised experiences in the Northeast of India, when Kagti met Srila Chatterjee, founder of Baro Market, co-founder of 47-A and fellow textile enthusiast, it was like having a conversation without words.

Ten months later, the product of that telepathic exchange is Feeling Through Fibre, a new art show in Mumbai curated by Kagti, which unites 11 women weavers from across the country who use textiles as a form of self-expression. “In Assam, it’s mostly the women who are involved in the weaving practices so the decision to have an all-women exhibit felt like a no-brainer,” says Kagti. “This show also opens during the week of Handloom Day, which is special in itself.

” Starting today, the exhibits will.