Introduction
The krama (Khmer: ក្រមា), a checkered cloth woven by Cambodian hands, holds a profound place in the nation’s material and social history. This textile—ubiquitous in daily life, ritual, and memory—is more than mere fabric: it is a cipher for Khmer identity, resilience, continuity, and ingenuity. Approaching the krama ethnologically requires attention not only to its material qualities, but also to its symbolic registers and historical transformations.

Material Culture and Traditional Production
Krama finds its roots deep in Cambodian history, predating Angkor—archaeological finds at Angkor Borey confirm that large krama-like cloths were worn as hip wrappers by figures depicted as Hindu deities as early as the first centuries CE. The materiality of the krama is defined by robust cotton threads, traditionally hand-spun and dyed with locally-sourced, often plant-based colors. Rural Khmer women, using simple looms called ‘Kei’ or ‘Kei Dombanh,’ have preserved techniques of weaving and dyeing for centuries. Rich families, historically, preferred silk, while the majority used cotton—the latter being more practical for everyday labor and resilient in Cambodia’s tropical climate.
Patterns, Symbolism, and Functions
The krama is most recognized by its checked pattern, traditionally in red, green or blue, though today its palette is diverse and expands with new dyes and tastes. It is a textile both versatile and symbolic:
- As a garment: worn as a scarf, belt, bandanna, or lower garment, adapted as needed for climate, work, or ceremony.
- As a tool: used to carry babies, make hammocks, serve as makeshift seats, and wrap offerings in religious rituals.
- In healing: tied as a bandage, or used as shade, shield, towel, or filter.
- In social play: children play games with the krama.
- As identity marker: the krama’s pattern can signal region, status, or group affiliation.
The krama’s presence from birth through death, woven into ceremony and routine, renders it a symbol of lifecycle and status. Every inhabitant of Cambodia traditionally has their own krama, a tangible link to land, kin, and custom.
Rituals, Spirituality, and Transmission
Krama is integral to the performance of Khmer rituals and the demonstration of respect. In major events—births, weddings, funerals—the krama marks transitions, expresses greetings, or signals reverence. Its function is not only utilitarian but also spiritual. Many Cambodians attribute the krama with protective powers, believing that each cloth—woven by someone known or beloved—offers luck and spiritual safeguarding.
Transmission of weaving knowledge is nearly always matrilineal, with women teaching daughters, nieces, and granddaughters. However, men contribute by cultivating cotton and harvesting dye plants—illustrating communal labor divided by gender, yet united by the production of heritage.
Political Histories and Transformations
During the Khmer Rouge period, the krama assumed new, fraught meanings. The red-and-white checkered version became an unofficial uniform, connoting ideological loyalty and later, for survivors, trauma or resistance. Distinctions of color—red and white for Pol Pot’s cadre, blue for suspected traitors—could be lethal, marking identity and fate in the extreme. The destruction of silk-producing mulberry trees and forced collectivization of krama production revealed the textile’s politicization.
Beyond its role as a garment, krama became a badge of survival, adaptation, and, for some, a bitter reminder of violence. Yet, post-1979, its everyday utility and continued use among refugees and migrants signified hope, nostalgia, and ongoing Cambodian resilience.
Contemporary Practices: Urban, Diasporic, Global
In contemporary Cambodia, krama production persists, with both professional weaving groups and community associations keeping techniques alive despite the pressures of modernization and textile imports. The krama has become a national symbol, celebrated in annual festivals, inscribed (as of December 2024) by UNESCO as part of Cambodia’s intangible cultural heritage.
In diasporic communities—in North America, Europe, Australia—the krama serves as a portable relic of memory and belonging. Migrants and their descendants wear it at temple, in dance, in art, marking both continuity and adaptation. As an ethnological object, the krama thus illustrates how material culture migrates while carrying layered connotations and affective histories.
Gender, Agency, and Heritage
Ethnographically, krama weaving underscores women’s agency as controllers of heritage transmission, social status, and household economy. Men’s labor—though less visible—remains crucial in cotton and dye production. This division of craft and production offers a microcosm of rural Khmer society as affected by gendered roles and kinship.
Educators and cultural associations in Cambodia pursue intergenerational skill transfer as central to keeping krama’s authentic forms and meanings alive amid globalization and mass production.
Conclusion: The Krama in Cambodian Life
Through its tangible and intangible dimensions, the Cambodian krama stands as a textile of survival, invention, and cultural affirmation. Whether seen in rural fields or urban art, on the shoulders of the elderly or the waists of dancers, in temples or migrant gatherings, it weaves together threads of past and present.
From ethnological vantage, the krama is not just cloth—it is the fabric of community, memory, and postcolonial negotiation. It reveals how daily objects become symbols, how utility shades into ritual, and how identity finds expression in textile.

















