The textiles of Bhutan are among the country's most distinctive art forms, produced by hand weaving known as thagzo — one of the thirteen traditional arts and crafts. Woven mainly by women on traditional looms from cotton, wool, nettle and silk, Bhutanese textiles range from the everyday national dress (the gho and kira) to the prestigious kushuthara brocade and the woollen yathra of Bumthang, and serve as markers of identity, region, status and occasion.
The textiles of Bhutan are a celebrated expression of the country's material culture, created through the hand-weaving tradition known as thagzo. Thagzo is counted among the Zorig Chusum, the thirteen traditional arts and crafts of Bhutan, and is practised principally by women on backstrap and frame looms using cotton, wool, nettle fibre and silk.[1]
Far more than clothing, Bhutanese textiles function as a living expression of cultural identity: their colours, fibres and motifs can signal region, clan, status and the formality of an occasion. The handwoven national dress — the gho, a knee-length belted robe for men, and the kira, an ankle-length wrapped dress for women — is itself a product of this weaving tradition.[2]
Major styles
Kushuthara is the most prestigious form of women's brocade. Woven from cotton and raw silk (bura) or entirely from silk, traditionally with vegetable dyes, it features a (usually white) field densely patterned with supplementary-weft motifs such as diamonds and half-diamonds; an elaborate piece can take up to a year to complete. The kushuthara weaving of Khoma in Lhuentse is especially renowned.[1]
Yathra is the woollen weaving of the highlands of Bumthang in central Bhutan, producing rich, textured fabrics in deep, earthy tones that are made into blankets, jackets and wraps suited to the cold. Across styles, patterning is built up from supplementary wefts interworked with the warp, with the most intricate motifs created by grouping and twining several supplementary wefts.[2]
Heritage and continuity
Weaving traditions are sustained both in village households and through institutions such as the Royal Textile Academy of Bhutan and the National Institute for Zorig Chusum, which document techniques and train new generations of weavers.[3] Bhutanese textiles are central to ceremonial life, are given and received as marks of respect, and have become a recognised emblem of the country's craft heritage internationally.
See also
References
See also
Thimphu Tshechu
The Thimphu Tshechu is a three-day religious festival held annually in autumn at Tashichho Dzong in Bhutan's capital city, Thimphu. As the capital's principal tshechu, it is among the most attended festivals in the country and features elaborate mask dances, the display of a sacred thongdrel, and large-scale public celebration.
culture·5 min readTego and Wonju
The tego and wonju are the outer and inner jackets, respectively, worn by Bhutanese women over the kira. The wonju is a long-sleeved blouse worn closest to the body, while the tego is a short jacket worn over it. Together they complete the formal women's dress ensemble prescribed by the Driglam Namzha code.
culture·6 min readRoman Dzongkha
Roman Dzongkha is the official system for writing Dzongkha, Bhutan's national language, in the Latin alphabet. Developed by the Dzongkha Development Commission and first introduced in 1991, a simplified version was approved for government use in 1997 and made mandatory for the standardised spelling of geographical names. It represents the spoken pronunciation of central Bhutan and underlies the romanised forms used in official English-language documents.
culture·3 min readZangto Pelri Temple
Zangto Pelri Lhakhang is a three-storey temple in central Thimphu, built in 1990 by Dasho Aku Tongmi, the composer of Bhutan's national anthem. Its three levels represent Guru Rinpoche's celestial paradise, the Copper-Coloured Mountain (Zangdopelri).
culture·3 min readShinje Cham (Dance of the Lord of Death)
Shinje Cham is a cham dance that dramatises the judgment of the dead by Shinje (Yama), the Lord of Death. Through a moral allegory depicting the weighing of a sinner's and a virtuous person's deeds, the dance teaches audiences about karma, ethical conduct, and the consequences of actions in the afterlife.
culture·7 min readProject 108 (108 Jangchub Chortens, Gelephu)
Project 108 is a royal initiative announced by King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck on 21 February 2026 to raise 108 Jangchub Chortens — each 15 metres tall and spaced 108 metres apart — in a single coordinated day along the Mau Chhu in Gelephu Mindfulness City. The structures of all 108 chortens are to be completed together on 1 November 2026, drawing on the Bhutanese tradition of zhabto and an estimated 40,000 volunteers.
culture·7 min read
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