Some garments are worn. Others are inhabited. The Neelam Darbar Kurta Set belongs to the second category.
Crafted in a deep royal indigo — a color that has dressed Mughal courts, Rajput queens, and now the modern woman who understands that purple is never simply purple — this three-piece ensemble is defined by embellishment that crosses from embroidery into jewellery.
The silk kurta's defining feature is its yoke: a serpentine ogee composition in silver zardozi and gota ribbon work, interrupted by hand-set turquoise cabochons and ruby-red stones that catch light the way gemstones do, not sequins. This polychrome embellishment extends to scattered floral medallions across the lower body and densely worked cuffs, creating a garment that rewards close attention at every level.
Beneath, a fluid georgette sharara adds volume without weight. A sheer organza dupatta completes the layering.
The styling choice — oxidized silver over gold — is not incidental. It is the entire point.
Reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, formal Eid gatherings, and occasions where regal is the only register worth dressing in.
Crafted in a deep royal indigo — a color that has dressed Mughal courts, Rajput queens, and now the modern woman who understands that purple is never simply purple — this three-piece ensemble is defined by embellishment that crosses from embroidery into jewellery.
The silk kurta's defining feature is its yoke: a serpentine ogee composition in silver zardozi and gota ribbon work, interrupted by hand-set turquoise cabochons and ruby-red stones that catch light the way gemstones do, not sequins. This polychrome embellishment extends to scattered floral medallions across the lower body and densely worked cuffs, creating a garment that rewards close attention at every level.
Beneath, a fluid georgette sharara adds volume without weight. A sheer organza dupatta completes the layering.
The styling choice — oxidized silver over gold — is not incidental. It is the entire point.
Reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, formal Eid gatherings, and occasions where regal is the only register worth dressing in.
Some garments are worn. Others are inhabited. The Neelam Darbar Kurta Set belongs to the second category.
Crafted in a deep royal indigo — a color that has dressed Mughal courts, Rajput queens, and now the modern woman who understands that purple is never simply purple — this three-piece ensemble is defined by embellishment that crosses from embroidery into jewellery.
The silk kurta's defining feature is its yoke: a serpentine ogee composition in silver zardozi and gota ribbon work, interrupted by hand-set turquoise cabochons and ruby-red stones that catch light the way gemstones do, not sequins. This polychrome embellishment extends to scattered floral medallions across the lower body and densely worked cuffs, creating a garment that rewards close attention at every level.
Beneath, a fluid georgette sharara adds volume without weight. A sheer organza dupatta completes the layering.
The styling choice — oxidized silver over gold — is not incidental. It is the entire point.
Reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, formal Eid gatherings, and occasions where regal is the only register worth dressing in.
Crafted in a deep royal indigo — a color that has dressed Mughal courts, Rajput queens, and now the modern woman who understands that purple is never simply purple — this three-piece ensemble is defined by embellishment that crosses from embroidery into jewellery.
The silk kurta's defining feature is its yoke: a serpentine ogee composition in silver zardozi and gota ribbon work, interrupted by hand-set turquoise cabochons and ruby-red stones that catch light the way gemstones do, not sequins. This polychrome embellishment extends to scattered floral medallions across the lower body and densely worked cuffs, creating a garment that rewards close attention at every level.
Beneath, a fluid georgette sharara adds volume without weight. A sheer organza dupatta completes the layering.
The styling choice — oxidized silver over gold — is not incidental. It is the entire point.
Reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, formal Eid gatherings, and occasions where regal is the only register worth dressing in.


