Praewa — The Queen of Thai Silk
The Queen of Thai silk

Praewa — Pattern and Memory


Praewa is the Phu Thai signature: patterned silk built with supplementary-weft arts—khit (continuous) and jok/chok (picked, discontinuous). Motifs grow from the underside of the loom, guided by family pattern knowledge. A living lineage from Kalasin and neighboring Isan provinces, carried forward on the loom, etc.

0 products

Sorry, there are no products in this collection.

Return to Home

What it is, and why it matters

Praewa – Phu Thai Silk Art


  • Praewa (ผ้าแพรวา) is a Phu Thai silk distinguished by patterned ends and bands made with khit and jok methods. During weaving, the figure develops on the underside of the loom; makers use tools and edge devices to keep the cloth true. Within Praewa you’ll meet classic structure families: Praewa luang (pattern saved, thrown by shuttle), Praewa jok (added picked flowers), and Praewa ko (interlinked, multi-color patterning), etc.

  • Praewa is known for order, polish, and shine, often combining 10–12 motif bands with 2–9 silk colors in one piece. Palettes traditionally favor deep greens, yellows, blues, and blacks; composition varies by the weaver. Designs are preserved in “pha saeo” pattern samplers—small silk swatches kept in each household as a living archive of motifs, revisited generation after generation.

  • Praewa is the emblem cloth of the Phu Thai—a people whose migrations brought them to the Phu Phan ranges of Kalasin, Nakhon Phanom, Mukdahan, and Sakon Nakhon. The term Praewa once referred to a one-arm-span length used as a shoulder cloth (pha bieng) in festival dress; today it remains a carrier of identity, memory, and refined skill on silk.