The area is also known for its exquisite handicrafts, especially its diverse styles of embroidery, which vary with the different tribal communities who live in the region.

Many of the groups were once nomadic herds-people, seasonally moving around the desert regions across and around northern India.
Some struggle to maintain this traditional lifestyle as the region becomes more industrialized and traditional lands are lost to development; many are in communities where traditional life, dress and craft skills (a means of earning income) are quickly changing.

Metal wares, mostly water carriers, given as gifts at a couples wedding, line the shelves.


The men wear cotton smocks and many have earpieces; two discs of gold-work joined by a threaded tube, which pierces through the cup of the ear.
The women wear coiled ear pieces, sometimes of gold or silver known as ‘Nagali’ earrings, they are said to be an abstract representation of a snake.
This woman wears a nylon industrial sleeve as a bangle. The use of the object is an interesting adaptation and has a historic reference to the large hour-glass shaped ivory bangles called ‘Baloyun’ once worn by married Rabari women until widowhood or death.The nose jewellery this woman wears is similar in design to the earpieces of the Rabari men.













