Sunday, February 27, 2022

Mitti Attar Uses

  

What is Mitti Attar? - Attar kannauj





Mitti Attar – The smell of the first monsoon rains on the dry ground. This is a unique attar that is not made from a plant, but from a special, half-baked clay called khapra, which is harvested near Kannauj. Where does the aroma of clay come from? Petrichor is an oily substance secreted by certain plants, then absorbed by the clay soil and rocks during dry periods. Mitti attar smell like petrichor.

It is subtle, dusty, intimate, deep and once again very uniquely and recognizably Indian. India’s earth expresses itself and is held by the sandalwood base. The sandalwood really takes a back seat and allows the subtleties of this aroma to come through. The minerals of the baked earth seem to dance and sing in the vibration and aroma of this attar. There is nothing quite like it. It draws one inwards and calls us to the depths of ourselves

In the perfume capital of India — Kannauj in Uttar Pradesh — a century-old process is used

to recreate that loamy smell of the first shower, as an attar.


There are about 400 attar perfumeries in Kannauj but only about 10 per cent of them make the mitti attar, according to the government-run Fragrance & Flavour Development Centre (FFDC).

“The process takes about 15 working days,” says Akhilesh Pathak, a fourth generation perfumer who has inherited one of Kannauj’s oldest attar-manufacturing companies, Munna Lal Sons. “Ironically, monsoon is the most difficult time to produce mitti attar, because the procedure involves baking clay extracted from topsoil, all of which is hard to do with squelchy monsoon earth. Typically, we don’t produce mitti attar in the rains as a result.”


Mitti attar is used as a fragrance, an air freshener, an essential oil and in aromatherapy, because the smell of it is so calming.

Mitti attar is used as a fragrance, an air freshener, an essential oil — and in aromatherapy, because the smell of it is so calming.

“I have been hoarding my 100 ml bottle for about four years now because I love how amazing it smells,” says Suman Bolar, 45, a freelance writer from Bangalore. “I use it for various purposes – I put it in the washing machine when I wash my bedsheets, often put a few drops on my pillow before I sleep and sometimes just dab it behind my ears to feel good.” Bolar got her first bottle years ago, as a gift from her husband, and ordered this bottle online.

Satish Dhar, 38, a Dehradun-based researcher and another ardent fan of the mitti attar, say it’s uncanny how close it comes to petrichor.


“I use it as an air-freshener because its earthy smell has a very soothing effect that never fails to lift my mood,” says Dhar, who discovered the perfurme through his work with an NGO for organic farmers.

Read: What makes rain smell so good?

Here’s how mitti attar is made, then.

Clay is extracted from the topsoil and baked in a kiln, then immersed in water within copper cauldrons called degs, which are then sealed with earth.

A cow-dung fire is then lit underneath the cauldron and the vapour travels through bamboo pipes to condense in receivers, over a base of oil, to form the attar. The process is called hydro-distillation.

“The clay used for this purpose is baked exactly like a chapati,” says Shakti Vinay Shukla, director of the FFDC. “First, it is made into a soft dough, then flattened into discs, which are baked at a fairly high temperature to prepare them for hydro-distillation.”


The attar is stored in leather bottles, which absorb the moisture and further concentrate the fragrance.

Watch: How mitti attar is made




“The price of a bottle can vary from Rs 40 to Rs 1,000 for 10 ml, depending on the base oil used,” says Gaurav Mehrotra, owner of the 44-year-old Puja Perfumery. “Sandalwood base oil costs a lot more than liquid paraffin, for instance.”


Sales, according to Pathak, have been growing lately with orders coming from across the country and abroad, including countries such as the US, UK, Europe and Japan.

“We created a website a year ago to cater to growing demand from outside India, and two months ago we added a payment gateway so we could execute orders online,” Pathak adds. “We now get about 20 online orders per month for mitti attar and are tying up with foreign brands to market our fragrances better abroad. Most foreign orders still come from the Middle-East, traditionally the largest market for most attars.”

The mitti attar is also now available on Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal, among other e-commerce sites. Which comes as a relief to people like Bolar. “My 100 ml should last a while. Kept airtight it retains its fragrance for a long time,” she says. “But after my first bottle finished, I went without one for years. Most people don’t even know it exists.”


Shershaah 2021 Full HD 720p movie download in Hindi

 Shershaah 2021 Full HD 720p movie download in Hindi

IMDb Rating: 

Genre: Action, Drama
Director: Vishnuvardhan
Release Date: 12 Aug 2021
Star Cast: Sidharth Malhotra, Kiara Advani, Ankita Goraya

LineStory:

Movie Story: Biopic of Captain Vikram Batra of the Indian army, won Param Vir Chakra, India’s highest honor for his actions during the Kargil conflict in 1999.

 

Shershaah Hindi Movie Download (2021) Filmywap isaimini 720p & 480p .This is a Bollywood Hindi movie and available in 1080p, 480p, 720p quality. This is a Action, Biography, Drama, History & War based movie. This movie is released in 2021 in the Hindi languageClick on the Download button below to download this movie. This is the Latest Web – DL with Hindi audio amazone prime.

moviesprime.co is one of the Best Websites/Platform For Bollywood and Indian Movies and Series. We also provide south movies like Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam movies, and also Bengali, Punjabi, and other local movies. We Provide Direct Fast Google Drive & Google Photos Download Links For Secure Downloading. Just Click On Download Button And Follow Steps To Download And Watch Movies Online For Free.

Based on the life of Captain Vikram Batra who was an officer of the Indian Army, posthumously awarded with the Param Vir Chakra, India’s highest and most prestigious award for valour, for his actions during the 1999 Kargil War in Kashmir between India and Pakistan.

Captain Vikram Batra’s saga is as fresh in the public imagination as if 1999 was yesterday. The memory of this young soldier who died that year fighting the Pakistan Army in Kargil will forever be associated with his pop-culture-referencing victory signal, “Yeh dil maange more” (This heart asks for more), borrowing Pepsi’s iconic advertising slogan. Batra was posthumously awarded India’s highest military honour for war-time valour, the Param Vir Chakra.

Director Vishnu Varadhan and writer Sandeep Shrivastava have chosen to chronicle the late Captain’s remarkable life on screen at a time when India is overrun by elements demanding strident proclamations of patriotism from all Indians including artists. Far from echoing the shrillness some others in Bollywood have supplied in response, Varadhan and Shrivastava have created a film that is unexpectedly restrained despite being set largely on a battlefield.

Shershaah (transl. The lion king) is a 2021 Indian Hindi-language biographical war film directed by Vishnuvardhan and written by Sandeep Shrivastava, with Hiroo Yash Johar, Karan Johar and Apoorva Mehta of Dharma Productions and Shabbir Boxwala, Ajay Shah and Himanshu Gandhi of Kaash Entertainment jointly serving as producers. Tracing the life journey of Param Vir Chakra awardee and army captain Vikram Batra, it stars Sidharth Malhotra in a double role, as Batra and his identical twin brother Vishal, while Kiara Advani plays the role of Vikram’s girlfriend Dimple Cheema.