The virtues ascribed to the lotus plant (Nelumbo nucifera) in Asian history and lore are boundless. Every part of the plant has utility and virtue, whether medicinal, nutritional, spiritual, or all three. And it is beautiful, with pure, stately blossoms rising above large circular leaves, whole vast lakes of them. The flowers are harvested daily for religious and decorative uses. But overlooked for centuries, at least in the Western world, is the cloth woven from its fibers.
Besides all the aforementioned virtues, fabric woven from lotus fiber is wrinkle resistant, waterresistant, breathable, sturdy but sinuous, and comfortable in every way. It’s said that in villages across India, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Thailand, the fiber has been harvested and crafted into special ritual cloth since ancient times.
And perhaps that’s true. The practice had…