

This kora tissue dupatta from the Watermark collection carries an abstract geometry brocade woven into the base: angular forms with broader negative space between them, more open and architectural in character than a dense all-over jaal. The pattern is tonal, part of the weave structure itself, emerging and receding across the surface as the fabric moves and the light shifts. In shadow the body reads as a deep charcoal-pewter; in direct light it opens to a bright, clean reflective silver. Single layer, organza-weight, sheer at the edges. The border is woven in cotton jacquard with extra warp and weft — a dense dark honeycomb structure, visibly heavier and more structured than the airy body, providing a sharp dark frame that grounds the silver-grey. Black twisted tassels finish the ends. The dupatta drapes with the natural crispness of kora tissue — it holds its shape, moves with a slight rustle, and sits well whether worn as a traditional drape or used as a stole or wrap over contemporary dress. Where the spider web reads as intricate and fine, the abstract geometry reads as bold and considered — a different mood in the same palette. The silver-grey tone is one of the most vers
A mood, an occasion, a feeling, matched to real, wearable pieces from independent Indian brands.







