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No waste of time

This new workshop at a city museum teaches children to make traditional wooden Thaki dolls native to Sawantwadi, from scrap

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Wooden thaki dolls with the one made from paper mache at the centre

Wooden thaki dolls with the one made from paper mache at the centre

Way before the arrival of multinational toy companies manufacturing figurines resembling characters from superhero flicks with sound effects into Indian markets, simple options made from wood, modelled after the human body, were enough to cheer or comfort a child. The history of doll-making can be traced back to 2000 BCE — remnants of which are still found in children's graves of ancient Greece and Rome. But closer home, in the Konkan region of Sawantwadi, they have a special meaning.

Thaki dolls are cylindrical wooden figurines bearing the illustration of a woman in a saree. It was presented to young girls before marriage by their mothers as a companion. These are usually yellow with a signature Maharashtrian print. And this weekend, children get to experiment with the craft at a workshop hosted at the Children's Museum in the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya (CSMVS). "They've always been made out of wood; we have a few original pieces at the museum. These are now collector's items and so, we thought of making them out of waste," Meagan Vaz (designation) of CSMVS, who will be conducting the workshop says.

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