Red has never needed an introduction in South Asian dressing. But the Laal Gulbaagh Kurta Set earns its place in that lineage rather than simply inheriting it.
Crafted from chanderi in a deep, wine-edged crimson, the kurta's defining moment is its yoke — a dense, sculptural composition of gold ari embroidery in which lotus blooms, flowering stems, and trailing garden vines are worked with a thread density that gives the embroidery an almost three-dimensional relief. Dabka metallic wire coiling traces the outlines, sitara discs catch the light at intervals, and organza detailing at the sleeves adds a whisper of sheerness to an otherwise grounded palette.
The body of the kurta breathes — scattered sitara motifs across a clean crimson ground — before the hem border reasserts the embroidery's full weight, mirrored precisely on the straight pants below. The silhouette is deliberately tailored. More fitted than the relaxed volumes elsewhere in this collection, it brings a contemporary precision to a color that has dressed South Asian women at their most celebrated moments for centuries.
Reach for it at baraat receptions, Karva Chauth, anniversary celebrations, and wedding functions where crimson and gold remains — as it always has been — the most powerful thing you can wear.
Crafted from chanderi in a deep, wine-edged crimson, the kurta's defining moment is its yoke — a dense, sculptural composition of gold ari embroidery in which lotus blooms, flowering stems, and trailing garden vines are worked with a thread density that gives the embroidery an almost three-dimensional relief. Dabka metallic wire coiling traces the outlines, sitara discs catch the light at intervals, and organza detailing at the sleeves adds a whisper of sheerness to an otherwise grounded palette.
The body of the kurta breathes — scattered sitara motifs across a clean crimson ground — before the hem border reasserts the embroidery's full weight, mirrored precisely on the straight pants below. The silhouette is deliberately tailored. More fitted than the relaxed volumes elsewhere in this collection, it brings a contemporary precision to a color that has dressed South Asian women at their most celebrated moments for centuries.
Reach for it at baraat receptions, Karva Chauth, anniversary celebrations, and wedding functions where crimson and gold remains — as it always has been — the most powerful thing you can wear.
Red has never needed an introduction in South Asian dressing. But the Laal Gulbaagh Kurta Set earns its place in that lineage rather than simply inheriting it.
Crafted from chanderi in a deep, wine-edged crimson, the kurta's defining moment is its yoke — a dense, sculptural composition of gold ari embroidery in which lotus blooms, flowering stems, and trailing garden vines are worked with a thread density that gives the embroidery an almost three-dimensional relief. Dabka metallic wire coiling traces the outlines, sitara discs catch the light at intervals, and organza detailing at the sleeves adds a whisper of sheerness to an otherwise grounded palette.
The body of the kurta breathes — scattered sitara motifs across a clean crimson ground — before the hem border reasserts the embroidery's full weight, mirrored precisely on the straight pants below. The silhouette is deliberately tailored. More fitted than the relaxed volumes elsewhere in this collection, it brings a contemporary precision to a color that has dressed South Asian women at their most celebrated moments for centuries.
Reach for it at baraat receptions, Karva Chauth, anniversary celebrations, and wedding functions where crimson and gold remains — as it always has been — the most powerful thing you can wear.
Crafted from chanderi in a deep, wine-edged crimson, the kurta's defining moment is its yoke — a dense, sculptural composition of gold ari embroidery in which lotus blooms, flowering stems, and trailing garden vines are worked with a thread density that gives the embroidery an almost three-dimensional relief. Dabka metallic wire coiling traces the outlines, sitara discs catch the light at intervals, and organza detailing at the sleeves adds a whisper of sheerness to an otherwise grounded palette.
The body of the kurta breathes — scattered sitara motifs across a clean crimson ground — before the hem border reasserts the embroidery's full weight, mirrored precisely on the straight pants below. The silhouette is deliberately tailored. More fitted than the relaxed volumes elsewhere in this collection, it brings a contemporary precision to a color that has dressed South Asian women at their most celebrated moments for centuries.
Reach for it at baraat receptions, Karva Chauth, anniversary celebrations, and wedding functions where crimson and gold remains — as it always has been — the most powerful thing you can wear.


