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Antique Wooden Agricultural Seed Spreader Bijni Original Old

SKU ODS1712
Prix

95,00£

Antique Hand-Carved Wooden Food-Spreader “Bijni” from Northern India — Exclusive Ethnographic Farm Tool for Decorative Display

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Bring a piece of rural Indian artisanal heritage into your home with this rare hand-carved wooden “Bijni” tool, once used for sowing seeds on traditional farms. Originating from central India (likely Madhya Pradesh), it exemplifies both utilitarian charm and richly detailed folk sculpture.

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Key Features & Highlights

Authenticity & provenance: This is a genuine vintage “seed holder / spreader” (locally called a Bijni). These tools are documented in ethnographic archives of Indian tribal and folk arts — for example, one example is recorded with carved scenes of plowing and the Hindu god Ganesha along its sides.

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Hand-carved from a single block of wood: The form, decoration and patina show years of use, wear and natural aging — wood grain, worn edges and the subtle sheen of age all contribute to its aesthetic appeal and authenticity.

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Decorative carvings: The sides show figurative and farming motifs, perhaps animals, plough scenes or symbolic figures, lending it a strong sculptural character.

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Rich patina & rustic aesthetic: The dark wood tone, variations in surface, and visible tool marks create a warm, tactile presence — perfect as a sculptural object in a home or gallery setting.

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Functional shape with anthropological interest: While originally a tool for distributing seed in the field, its form now invites reinterpretation: a display object, a pedestal, a small planter base, or simply an art piece that invites reflection on rural labour and tradition.

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Versatile interior décor piece: Ideal for collectors of ethnographic artefacts, interiors with global/tribal flair, rustic chic, or anyone seeking a conversation-starter sculptural form.

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Dimensions & Condition

Approx measurements 18 × 15 × 15 cm (~7 × 6 × 6 inches).

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Condition: Vintage-used. The wood shows age-related wear consistent with use (surface scuffs, patina, possibly small cracks). No major structural damage mentioned in comparable listings. Always inspect closely for stability if used as a display stand or pedestal.

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Why It’s Special

Rare utilitarian artefact: Many seed-spreader tools from rural India were thrown away, repurposed or left unloved; finding one with quality carving and intact form is uncommon.

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Cross-discipline appeal: Equal interest for ethnographic collectors, rustic interior decorators, folk-art enthusiasts, and sculptural furniture aficionados.

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Story-rich provenance: The carved iconography gives insight into the planting ritual, community life, and religious symbolism of farming culture in Madhya Pradesh.

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Sustainable & tactile: A genuine wooden object with texture, warmth and patina gives a distinct material quality that modern mass-manufactured items can’t match

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