Handcrafted Womenswear
Our collection of womenswear is 100% handmade, involving a slow and soulful process, be it block printing, hand embroidery, natural dyeing, or even painting by artisans whose skills have been passed down for generations. Wearing them is not just about style—it’s about wearing a story.
Dresses: Flowing silhouettes, handmade elegance, and centuries of tradition, kaftans and kurtis are more than just garments; they are moving canvases of culture. From the breezy kaftan kurta once worn by royals to the ever-evolving dress designs that blend comfort with modernity, these pieces have found a timeless space in wardrobes across the world.
Shirts: In India, the art of making handcrafted shirts runs deep. Techniques like hand block printing, hand painting, and traditional khadi weaving are not just decorative, they tell stories of identity, place, and process. A handmade shirt often passes through dozens of skilled hands, from spinning and dyeing to block carving and stitching, each step preserving a part of our textile heritage. This makes every handmade shirt not just a garment, but a canvas of slow fashion.
T-Shirts: In a world dominated by fast fashion, handmade t-shirts bring with them stories of craftsmanship, care, and conscious living. Here, each piece starts not in a factory, but in a small studio or artisan’s home. Threads are chosen with intention, fabrics are sourced with sustainability in mind, and every stitch tells a human story. These handmade t-shirts are not just worn, they are lived in.
Jackets/ Shrugs: Outerwear in Indian fashion has always been more than just a layer, it's a story woven with craft, culture, and individuality. Across India, artisans have long used techniques like hand embroidery, quilting, and weaving to create stunning handcrafted jackets and traditional shrugs. For example, in Rajasthan, quilted jackets, often reversible, are stitched with precision, each one taking days to complete. And in the Northeast, tribal communities craft sleeveless jackets from handwoven textiles, showcasing their distinct identity.
Skirts/ Ghagras/ Wrap Arounds: From the swaying ghagra skirts worn during folk dances to the breezy cotton long skirts for women spotted on modern city streets, the skirt has traveled centuries, always evolving and adapting, yet staying rooted in grace and movement. In India, skirts are not just garments, but are canvases of culture, handcrafted, stitched and dyed by skilled artisans who understand not just fabric, but a feeling.