The Panna Chanderi Kurta Set asks a question the Kamal already answered in pink: what changes when you change the accent?
The answer, it turns out, is everything — and nothing. The construction is the same: silk chanderi and organza kurta body, tissue-chanderi yoke edged in a scalloped gold gota border, khaitan silk pants with organza detailing, striped tissue dupatta catching light in every direction. The embellishment hierarchy is identical: silk appliqué as the primary design language, gota and zari as the metallic register, sequins as the light-catching detail.
But the green changes the mood entirely. Where pink reads festive and feminine, parrot green reads botanical and contemporary — a color that belongs equally to a Mughal garden manuscript and a modern wardrobe. The appliqué motifs here are more circular in form, closer to medallion than lotus, their scalloped green edges carrying a different kind of precision.
Gold buti scatter across the ivory ground takes on more visual presence here — the green appliqués placed with greater restraint, allowing the zari butis to breathe between them.
Reach for it at Navratri celebrations, Eid gatherings, day weddings, festive brunches, and every occasion where green — in the right hands — is the most considered color in the room.
The answer, it turns out, is everything — and nothing. The construction is the same: silk chanderi and organza kurta body, tissue-chanderi yoke edged in a scalloped gold gota border, khaitan silk pants with organza detailing, striped tissue dupatta catching light in every direction. The embellishment hierarchy is identical: silk appliqué as the primary design language, gota and zari as the metallic register, sequins as the light-catching detail.
But the green changes the mood entirely. Where pink reads festive and feminine, parrot green reads botanical and contemporary — a color that belongs equally to a Mughal garden manuscript and a modern wardrobe. The appliqué motifs here are more circular in form, closer to medallion than lotus, their scalloped green edges carrying a different kind of precision.
Gold buti scatter across the ivory ground takes on more visual presence here — the green appliqués placed with greater restraint, allowing the zari butis to breathe between them.
Reach for it at Navratri celebrations, Eid gatherings, day weddings, festive brunches, and every occasion where green — in the right hands — is the most considered color in the room.
The Panna Chanderi Kurta Set asks a question the Kamal already answered in pink: what changes when you change the accent?
The answer, it turns out, is everything — and nothing. The construction is the same: silk chanderi and organza kurta body, tissue-chanderi yoke edged in a scalloped gold gota border, khaitan silk pants with organza detailing, striped tissue dupatta catching light in every direction. The embellishment hierarchy is identical: silk appliqué as the primary design language, gota and zari as the metallic register, sequins as the light-catching detail.
But the green changes the mood entirely. Where pink reads festive and feminine, parrot green reads botanical and contemporary — a color that belongs equally to a Mughal garden manuscript and a modern wardrobe. The appliqué motifs here are more circular in form, closer to medallion than lotus, their scalloped green edges carrying a different kind of precision.
Gold buti scatter across the ivory ground takes on more visual presence here — the green appliqués placed with greater restraint, allowing the zari butis to breathe between them.
Reach for it at Navratri celebrations, Eid gatherings, day weddings, festive brunches, and every occasion where green — in the right hands — is the most considered color in the room.
The answer, it turns out, is everything — and nothing. The construction is the same: silk chanderi and organza kurta body, tissue-chanderi yoke edged in a scalloped gold gota border, khaitan silk pants with organza detailing, striped tissue dupatta catching light in every direction. The embellishment hierarchy is identical: silk appliqué as the primary design language, gota and zari as the metallic register, sequins as the light-catching detail.
But the green changes the mood entirely. Where pink reads festive and feminine, parrot green reads botanical and contemporary — a color that belongs equally to a Mughal garden manuscript and a modern wardrobe. The appliqué motifs here are more circular in form, closer to medallion than lotus, their scalloped green edges carrying a different kind of precision.
Gold buti scatter across the ivory ground takes on more visual presence here — the green appliqués placed with greater restraint, allowing the zari butis to breathe between them.
Reach for it at Navratri celebrations, Eid gatherings, day weddings, festive brunches, and every occasion where green — in the right hands — is the most considered color in the room.


