The Zumurrud Anarkali Set understands something that most garments do not: that craftsmanship exists even where the camera cannot see it.
Turn this anarkali around and the back yoke carries the same dense gold ari embroidery as the front — botanical vines, large floral medallions, trailing leaves — worked with the same precision across chanderi silk in a deep, saturated emerald. It is the detail that separates a garment made for photographs from one made for the woman wearing it.
The full, floor-length silhouette flares generously across paneled sections consumed by all-over ari goldwork, while pita ribbon-work and sitara disc embellishments concentrate at the cuffs and a moti-trimmed hem border grounds the composition with one final flourish of craft.
A sheer organza dupatta adds the lightness the silhouette needs. The fitted net-lycra churidar, gathered at the ankle, completes a form that has dressed South Asian women for centuries — and shows no sign of tiring.
Paired with a gold choker and jhumkas, reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, engagement celebrations, and formal Eid gatherings where emerald and gold is simply the only answer.
Turn this anarkali around and the back yoke carries the same dense gold ari embroidery as the front — botanical vines, large floral medallions, trailing leaves — worked with the same precision across chanderi silk in a deep, saturated emerald. It is the detail that separates a garment made for photographs from one made for the woman wearing it.
The full, floor-length silhouette flares generously across paneled sections consumed by all-over ari goldwork, while pita ribbon-work and sitara disc embellishments concentrate at the cuffs and a moti-trimmed hem border grounds the composition with one final flourish of craft.
A sheer organza dupatta adds the lightness the silhouette needs. The fitted net-lycra churidar, gathered at the ankle, completes a form that has dressed South Asian women for centuries — and shows no sign of tiring.
Paired with a gold choker and jhumkas, reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, engagement celebrations, and formal Eid gatherings where emerald and gold is simply the only answer.
The Zumurrud Anarkali Set understands something that most garments do not: that craftsmanship exists even where the camera cannot see it.
Turn this anarkali around and the back yoke carries the same dense gold ari embroidery as the front — botanical vines, large floral medallions, trailing leaves — worked with the same precision across chanderi silk in a deep, saturated emerald. It is the detail that separates a garment made for photographs from one made for the woman wearing it.
The full, floor-length silhouette flares generously across paneled sections consumed by all-over ari goldwork, while pita ribbon-work and sitara disc embellishments concentrate at the cuffs and a moti-trimmed hem border grounds the composition with one final flourish of craft.
A sheer organza dupatta adds the lightness the silhouette needs. The fitted net-lycra churidar, gathered at the ankle, completes a form that has dressed South Asian women for centuries — and shows no sign of tiring.
Paired with a gold choker and jhumkas, reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, engagement celebrations, and formal Eid gatherings where emerald and gold is simply the only answer.
Turn this anarkali around and the back yoke carries the same dense gold ari embroidery as the front — botanical vines, large floral medallions, trailing leaves — worked with the same precision across chanderi silk in a deep, saturated emerald. It is the detail that separates a garment made for photographs from one made for the woman wearing it.
The full, floor-length silhouette flares generously across paneled sections consumed by all-over ari goldwork, while pita ribbon-work and sitara disc embellishments concentrate at the cuffs and a moti-trimmed hem border grounds the composition with one final flourish of craft.
A sheer organza dupatta adds the lightness the silhouette needs. The fitted net-lycra churidar, gathered at the ankle, completes a form that has dressed South Asian women for centuries — and shows no sign of tiring.
Paired with a gold choker and jhumkas, reach for it at reception evenings, nikah ceremonies, engagement celebrations, and formal Eid gatherings where emerald and gold is simply the only answer.


