

Ivory Katan silk with a warmth that sits closer to cream than white — this is a ground that absorbs light rather than reflecting it, giving the saree a quiet, almost luminous depth before the weave is even considered. Across the entire body runs a dense, tonal shikargah jaal — the great hunting-scene tradition of Banaras rendered in the most restrained register possible. Elephants, deer, peacocks, and the Maharaja’s procession are woven in the same ivory-gold tone as the ground, the contrast so subtle that the motifs reveal themselves gradually, shifting in and out of visibility as the light changes. The effect is neither loud nor absent — it is the particular confidence of a design that does not need to announce itself. The border is a clean gold zari chevron band, geometric and precise, framing the body without competing with it. The pallu brings the shikargah into fuller view — the same hunting scene motifs become more elaborate and legible, the composition denser, the gold zari more present. The blouse piece is plain ivory Katan silk with a narrow gold zari chevron border strip — restrained and exactly right. A saree for someone who finds meaning in the understated. It wears
A mood, an occasion, a feeling, matched to real, wearable pieces from independent Indian brands.







