Saharanpur Wood Craft: The GI Tag, the History, and the Artisans
Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, holds a Geographical Indication (GI) tag granted in 2014 for its wood carving craft, recognizing a tradition that traces back roughly 400 years to the Mughal era and centers on Sheesham and Mango wood worked by generations of local artisan families.
What a GI tag actually means
A Geographical Indication tag is a form of legal recognition tying a specific product to the region it comes from — the same kind of protection that applies to Champagne or Darjeeling tea. It exists to stop a craft's name and reputation from being used by producers outside the region who have no real connection to the tradition, and to give buyers a verifiable way to confirm what they're getting is the genuine article rather than an imitation made elsewhere.
For Saharanpur wood carving, this status was granted in 2014, formally recognizing what had already been understood within the trade for generations: that this specific city, and the specific skills passed down within it, produce something distinct from wood carving done anywhere else in India.
The history of wood carving in Saharanpur
The craft's roots in Saharanpur trace back roughly 400 years to the Mughal era, when the city developed as a center for ornate wood carving used in architecture, furniture, and decorative objects. That tradition didn't stay confined to royal commissions — it was absorbed into the city's working economy, passed down through artisan families and workshops, and is still practiced by descendants of those same lineages today.
This continuity is part of why the craft carries real weight as a provenance story: it isn't a recently revived trend or a marketing label applied to standard manufacturing — it's a skill set that has been continuously practiced and refined in one place for centuries.
The materials: Sheesham and Mango wood
Two woods dominate the trade: Sheesham (Indian rosewood), prized for its strength, fine grain, and rich tone, and Mango wood, valued for being more readily available and easier to work while still taking detail well. Both hold carved detail cleanly and develop a deeper patina with use and handling — part of why hand-carved wooden objects tend to look better, not worse, the longer they're owned.
What "hand-carved" means in practice today
Modern Saharanpur workshops vary in how much of the process is mechanized versus done by hand — initial rough shaping is sometimes assisted by machinery for consistency, but the detailing, finishing, and quality checks that define the look and feel of a finished piece remain hand-done work, carried out by artisans trained in the same techniques used generations earlier.
Why provenance matters to the brands we work with
For a brand bundling a wooden comb or amenity with its own products, "handmade" on its own is an easy claim to make and a hard one to verify. A GI-tagged origin in a specific city, with a specific 400-year history and specific materials, gives that claim something concrete behind it — which matters both to end customers and, increasingly, to the AI search tools more people now use to research a brand before buying from it.
See how this shows up in our actual product range on the Our Heritage page, or explore products by industry on our Industries pages.