It is every Indian mother's dream to see her daughter dress up like a bride and mothers in India have started dressing up on their daughter's big day like never before. In fact, sometimes we don't know who to admire more at a wedding, the bride or her mother. We came across one such mother-daughter duo who looked out of this world at the latter's wedding.
We are talking about bride Neha Mehta and her mother Brinda Mehta, who looked so regal on Neha's wedding that we can't stop admiring the duo's beautiful pictures together.
Neha Mehta stunned in a handloom chanderi silk lehenga for her wedding. The lehenga by Rimple and Harpreet is an ode to old vintage textiles, collectibles and curios and was handcrafted on a special leheriya Chanderi silk. The leheriya was derived from an old textile archived at the Jaipur Palace Museum, and the tie-dye effect called Panchranga (which was traditionally worn in Rajasthan during the spring Teej festival) was recreated by specialist dyers in Jaipur. The lehenga was adorned with a melange of motifs- delicate floral sprays found in Pichwai paintings, baroque chandeliers and fantastical birds of paradise; all rendered in fine zardozi using kasab, gotta and hand cut sequins. It was paired with an embroidered silk blouse and tulle dupattas in hues of burnished red and cinnamon.
Her pretty mother, Brinda Mehta chose a pista hued tulle and silk sharara by the same designer duo for the wedding. The kurti featured a jaal of gokru gotta interspersed with kachi-patti floral buttis, layered with zardozi wrought delicate floral blossoms and peacock motifs derived from a Mughal Garden of Paradise miniature painting. The traditional Kachi Patti embroidery involves an almost origami-like technique of delicate hand folded gota petals combined with metal salma and tikkis meticulously sewn on the ground fabric. The embroidery was combined along with dabka, resham, textured metal sequins and semi-precious stones to render the intricately detailed motifs. The sharara and dupatta featured all over sucha gota textures forming chevrons and geometric patterns derived from sacred geometry.
We can't get over the duo's pictures. Tell us how did you like them in the comment section below.
Comments (0)