ECCD ShowcaseASPARA × AjrakhCross-Cultural Craft as a Professional PracticeThis project presents a collaborative craft initiative between the ASPARA brand (Kazakhstan) and Indian master artisans Jabbar and Mubin Khatri, working in the traditional Ajrakh hand block-printing technique.Ajrakh is not historically part of Kazakh craft traditions. Within this project, it is used not as an imitation or stylistic borrowing, but as a technological and methodological framework for cross-cultural collaboration.The scarves are composed with a clear structural logic:the central field features Kazakh petroglyphs, referencing the ancient visual language of the steppe;the borders employ Indian ornamental systems, providing rhythm, modularity, and spatial order characteristic of Ajrakh textiles.All pieces are produced using hand-carved wooden blocks, natural dyes, and a fully manual printing process. Authorship, origin, and craft lineage are explicitly acknowledged.This project demonstrates how traditional craft technologies can:travel across cultural and geographic contexts,be responsibly adapted without erasing their origins,generate contemporary design outcomes grounded in ethics, material knowledge, and professional collaboration.The ASPARA × Ajrakh scarves serve as an applied example of the core principles of the Eurasian Council for Craft and Design (ECCD):Craft × Design integrationCross-cultural dialogue based on respect and authorshipMaterial intelligence and process transparencyContemporary relevance of traditional techniquesThis showcase marks one of the first official applied cases presented within the ECCD platform, setting a reference point for future international craft and design collaborations.Why This Matters for ECCDFor ECCD, this project demonstrates that craft is not a static heritage category, but a professional system of transferable knowledge. Techniques such as Ajrakh can operate beyond their geographic origin when approached with ethical awareness, respect for authorship, and clear methodological intent. This positions craft as an active contributor to contemporary design ecosystems rather than a preserved artifact.The ASPARA × Ajrakh collaboration illustrates ECCD’s stance on cross-cultural practice: meaningful exchange occurs not through stylistic fusion, but through structural dialogue — where technologies, processes, and visual systems are consciously re-contextualized without erasing their origins. Such projects establish a shared professional language between regions while maintaining cultural integrity.Finally, this case underlines ECCD’s commitment to applied outcomes. It moves beyond theory and representation, offering a tangible model for how international craft collaboration can function in real production, design authorship, and market-facing contexts. As such, it serves as a benchmark for future ECCD-supported initiatives across Eurasia and beyond.

On April 22, 2026, the first Management Board Meeting of the Eurasian Council for Craft & Design (ECCD) was held in Taraz, Kazakhstan.The meeting marked an important step in the institutional development of ECCD, establishing a foundation for its governance structure, program activities, and international cooperation.
The meeting was attended by the founding members of ECCD, ensuring a comprehensive and coordinated approach to the initial stage of the Council’s development.During the session, members of the Management Board were introduced, and their roles across different regions were outlined, reflecting the international scope of the Council.Key agenda items included:— adoption of the meeting agenda— acceptance of new members and expansion of the ECCD network— establishment of the Management Board structure— initiation of committee work in key areas of activityParticular attention was given to strategic priorities, including:— educational initiatives focused on craft branding and access to international markets— the development of a recognition framework for contributions to craft heritageOperational matters were also addressed, including the approval of the official ECCD stamp and initial financial structuring.“ECCD is being formed not as a formal structure, but as a working platform where craft and design become part of a unified international system. The key task now is not only to build the structure, but to give it real substance through people, projects, and collaboration,”— Aidarkhan Kaliyev, Co-founder of ECCD, President of ASPARA FASHION WEEKThe meeting concluded with a shared commitment to building a sustainable international platform connecting craft, design, and the creative industries across Eurasia.
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