Rimsha 3/4-Sleeve Popover Swing Top - Indigo/Multi

5 star rating
Code # 70C-16

Fair Trade, Made by Nishchay Cooperative
This Shibori swing top is dyed using the clamp method, a fabric dyeing technique that involves folding and clamping fabric with wooden blocks to create areas that resist dye. Using natural indigo and natural dyes, the result is this unique boxy shirt with circles of rust and blue on a natural background. Dolman sleeves and a handkerchief hem. Hand embroidery accents. Generously cut - consider sizing down for a less oversized look.

• Loose Fit/Boxy - Runs large, consider sizing down
• Length: M-L 24.5"
• Pullover top
• Dolman bracelet sleeves
• Front pockets
• Clamp-dyed Shibori/Natural Dye on 100% cotton

Wash/Care: Due to the nature of natural indigo dye, color may transfer onto lighter fabrics and other surfaces. Avoid contact with light-colored surfaces. Wash separately in cold water.

View Garment Measurements

1st Model is 5'10" and is wearing a size XSmall - Small

  • Size
  • Price
  • Qty
  • X-SMALL - SMALL
  • $118.00
  • MEDIUM - LARGE
  • $118.00
  • WOMEN'S 1W-2W
  • $118.00
  • WOMEN'S 3W-4W
  • $118.00
Our Mission Promo Image

Clamp Dyeing: Where Fabric Meets Art

In Kutch's arid plains, clamp dyeing transforms plain cloth into living art. Artisans begin with unbleached cotton, meticulously folding and layering lengths of fabric. They sandwich these folds between carved metal blocks—each clamp acting as a resist barrier. Once secured, the bundle is plunged into a series of dye vats, where colors seep into exposed areas but skirt the clamped sections.

The region's fierce sun and scarce water shape every hue: intense indigos deepen in the heat, while ochres and rusts emerge more subtly. After each bath, the cloth is rinsed and re clamped for the next color, allowing artisans to build complex, multi tonal patterns. When the final dye has set, the clamps are removed and the fabric unfurled, revealing crisp lines and organic symmetries born of precision and chance.

No two pieces are identical. Each carries the subtle fingerprints of the artisan—slight shifts in block alignment, tiny variations in fold depth, and the unique interplay of sun, water, and pigment. Clamp dyeing is more than a technique; it's a dialogue between maker, material, and nature.

Customer Reviews

5 star rating
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Happy Tope
Jul 28, 2025  |  By Ohma
Loved wearing this patriotic-themed top on July 4!

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Beautiful and Comfy Popover
Jul 12, 2025  |  By S. Sinclair
If you haven't checked out how the clamped dyed fabric is made for this popover--check it out! I was on the fence about this piece and the dress until I watched the video. The fabric for this shirt as well as the dress of the same pattern, love them both, is a multi-step hand dyed fabric. This isn't some off the shelf fabric! It's a super special fabric. The colors are subdued and quite earthy--it doesn't read as red, white, and blue in real life.

The shirt itself is layers quite well. The bodice is wide enough to not cinch most shifts, A-lines, etc which is nice if you like to layer.

The pockets and the hand embroidery are nice touches too. The sleeve length is perfect for bracelets.

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