E-commerce

Craft-tech fusion: Startups redefining Indian handicrafts with AI & e-commerce

India’s handicraft industry is a dazzling mosaic of culture and creativity, now being rewoven with threads of technology. In 2025, this centuries-old sector, employing over 15 crore (150 million) artisans, is experiencing a resurgence driven by digital transformation, sustainability, and global demand.

AI may seem like an unlikely ally for age-old crafts, but startups are leveraging it to solve age-old problems.

A new wave of startups is blending artificial intelligence (AI) and e-commerce platforms (like Shopify and its homegrown equivalents) to modernize traditional crafts. These “craft-tech” ventures are not only expanding market access for artisans but also aligning with sustainability goals. The result is a tech-driven entrepreneurship trend that’s breathing new life into Indian handicrafts while promoting eco-friendly practices.

AI: The New Artisan’s Ally

AI may seem like an unlikely ally for age-old crafts, but startups are leveraging it to solve age-old problems. Take Bare Craft, a platform inspired by the struggles of artisans during the pandemic. Bare Craft uses an AI-driven system to match the right artisans with suitable design projects, bringing transparency to supply chains and ensuring fair wages.

The impact has been striking: artisans on Bare Craft saw a 10% increase in revenue and a 50% reduction in production costs after adopting its AI matching and resource optimization tools. Over 5,500 traditional artisans, from block printers in Rajasthan to chikankari embroiderers in Lucknow, have joined the platform, connecting with buyers worldwide for the first time. The AI doesn’t replace craftsmanship; it amplifies it by recommending efficient raw materials, cutting unnecessary steps, and ensuring artisans get paid fairly while buyers get quality products faster.

Other startups are infusing AI in creative ways. Bengaluru-based Zwende, for instance, pairs “artisanal intelligence” with artificial intelligence. Its online marketplace for personalized handicrafts uses a recommendation engine and real-time 360° visualization to let customers co-create products with artisans. Shoppers can choose an item, say a lamp or cushion, then select art styles, colors, and materials, and instantly preview a custom design.

Zwende’s tech ensures the final design respects the craft’s traditional rules (they joke that “our AI is 2,500 years old”) so that even AI-guided customizations stay true to heritage. By harnessing data on customer preferences, Zwende helps artisans tweak designs for modern tastes, leading to higher sales and new product ideas. These AI-driven approaches are making Indian handicrafts “future-ready”, proving that innovation can go hand-in-hand with tradition.

E-Commerce Platforms: Bridging Tradition to Global Markets

Breaking geographical barriers has been another game-changer. E-commerce platforms, from global ones like Shopify to niche Indian startups – are enabling artisans to sell directly to a global audience. In many cases, artisans traditionally relied on middlemen or local fairs; now a direct-to-consumer model is emerging.

Bhubaneswar-based Typof exemplifies this shift. Founded in 2021, Typof provides a Shopify-like SaaS platform tailored for artisans, allowing even a small rural craft collective to set up an online store in minutes. The platform offers ready-to-use website templates, integrated payments and shipping, and even a live video shopping feature so customers can virtually visit an artisan’s workshop. By late 2021 Typof had onboarded 400+ artisans across India, who collectively received over 1,000 online orders in just a three-month span. Unlike big marketplaces that charge listing fees, Typof operates on a low-commission model, ensuring artisans keep more of their earnings.

This kind of digital empowerment, essentially giving artisans their own storefront – directly competes with larger e-commerce while focusing solely on artisan upliftment.

Other ventures are building marketplaces that blend storytelling with sales. Mumbai-based Peepul Tree, for example, launched in 2022 as a live-commerce platform connecting India’s finest artisans to global consumers. Through shoppable live videos and social media content, customers can learn the story behind a hand-carved sculpture or a Madhubani painting – and buy it on the spot. The startup raised $6 million in funding to digitize the artisan supply chain and plans to support 100,000 artisans across 500+ crafts, onboarding influencers to showcase these products via live streams. By merging content creation and e-commerce, Peepul Tree creates an immersive shopping experience, turning every artisan into a storyteller-entrepreneur.

Even established retail platforms are part of this craft-tech fusion. Shopify itself has highlighted Indian handicraft success stories like iTokri, an online store for handmade goods that grew by tapping into Shopify’s tools. Marketplaces like Etsy and Amazon Handmade have opened doors for Indian artisans abroad.

Moreover, India’s own Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC) is emerging to democratize online access, meaning a local weaver can potentially sell on multiple apps without a tech middleman. With India’s e-commerce market projected to soar to $400 billion by 2030, the stage is set for handicrafts to ride this wave.

Social media and live commerce trends further amplify reach, in fact, 22% of global e-commerce in 2024 was driven by digital platforms and influencers, a share that’s only growing. In short, digital marketplaces are turning local crafts into global clicks, helping artisans find customers from Delhi to New York at the swipe of a screen.

Crafting a New Future: Heritage Meets Innovation

These examples underscore a broader trend in India’s startup landscape: an entrepreneurial movement that fuses heritage with innovation. In a country where handicrafts account for a remarkable share of global artisan products (nearly 50% of worldwide handicraft exports in 2024 came from India), empowering this sector has both economic and cultural significance.

The government, too, has ramped up support, from the One District, One Product (ODOP) initiative that promotes regional crafts, to skill development schemes turning artisans into entrepreneurs. By leveraging AI and e-commerce, startups are complementing these policies, tackling challenges of middlemen, market access, and low margins that plagued artisans for decades.

For general consumers, the craft-tech fusion means a richer array of products with a story and soul, a chance to buy a rug or piece of jewelry that is both handmade and high-tech in its journey. For policymakers and stakeholders, it offers a template of sustainable development: preserving cultural heritage, empowering rural livelihoods, and promoting “Make in India” on a global stage, all while using cutting-edge tech. The fusion of craft and tech is ensuring that India’s artisanal legacy not only survives but thrives in the digital era, a true celebration of innovation rooted in tradition.

Guest author Gaurav Bhagat is the Managing Director of Consortium Gifts, an integrated gifting and promotional products company aiming to redefine the concept of corporate gifting in India. Any opinion expressed in this article is strictly those of the author.

Guest Author

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