Upon his return to India in 1993, he decided to salvage and revive that tradition. Step one was identifying constituents of the Mughal silk fabrics he wanted to revive. "For the weft, Mughal weavers used 'twist-less' silk which is nearly extinct in India today. Without that it is impossible to get the sharpness, that 'painted in' quality characteristic of the woven floral motifs of that period. It requires tremendous skill to weave with twist less yarn since unlike twisted yarn, there is nothing to hold it together. Thus it tends to snag and sway." Procuring that yarn, which had to be specially manufactured in Varanasi, in the minuscule quantities he required was tough. Step two was hunting for 98 per cent pure zari (silver thread plated with gold) which again had to be specially manufactured—the zari used these days has only 60 per cent to 80 per cent purity content. Step three involved introducing the original second warp system into the loom. "One is for the body fabric, the other for the pattern," explains Jain. After setting up two draw-looms at his family house in Ghaziabad, he graduated to step four: importing two traditional weavers from Ghazipur to train his men and operate the looms. "They threatened to leave every three days as they were used to weaving 5.5-metre sarees in four weeks. Here, weaving three inches took four days. A whole stole took four months," recalls Jain. When the first two 2.25-metre-long stoles, signed by the weavers in the best tradition of medieval craftsmanship, rolled out, steam pressed to "set the pattern" and finally calendered and readied, there was reason for jubilation. That exultation stemmed from the realisation that