The blouse
The blouse is entirely covered in a dense diamond lattice of hand-set oval mirrors, each framed in antique gold zari and outlined by fine cut dana embroidery that fills every gap between them — no base fabric visible, no unworked surface. The mirrors catch and throw light from every direction, creating a mosaic that moves with the wearer. Wide square-set straps carry the same embellishment from shoulder to body without interruption, reading as structural jewellery as much as garment.
The defining detail is the hem: a full row of hanging crystal and bead fringe that falls below the blouse edge, swaying with every movement — a chandelier effect that separates this piece from every other mirror blouse in the market. The back closes with a hook closure, keeping the back line clean and the silhouette uninterrupted.
The lehenga
The cascade-style organza lehenga skirt is cut in layers that fall in a sweeping, voluminous silhouette — the organza giving each layer a translucent quality that catches light differently as it moves. Vertical lines of diamond-shaped mirror work descend from waist to hem, their spacing creating a cascading effect that mirrors the layered construction of the skirt itself. At the base, a wide mirror work and gold zari lace border anchors the hem with ceremonial weight — the kind of detail that reads beautifully in every step of a sangeet or reception walk.
Worn together, the blouse and lehenga create a complete statement that needs nothing added — the mirror potli bag and statement choker as styled complete a look that is entirely self-contained and utterly distinctive.