Hand Block Printing
Woodblock printing on textiles is the process of printing patterns onto fabrics, usually of linen, cotton or silk, by means of incised wooden blocks. The drawings are hand carved into rosewood blocks which are then used as stamps to transfer the prints onto the fabrics.
It is necessary only to ink the block and bring it into firm and even contact with the cloth to achieve the desired print.
It is the earliest, simplest and slowest of all methods of textile printing. There is evidence it was practiced as early as the fifth century BC, with actual fragments found from as early as the fifteenth century in India, China and Japan.