Heart felt
VOGUE India
|January - February 2026
It may have taken a few sharp rights and smart lefts to find her true calling, but Melissa Joseph believes that her memory-laden felt art is well worth the journey it took to get there.
Melissa Joseph's art career is rooted in a bittersweet irony: her late father, who had initially discouraged her from pursuing a career in the arts, is now one of the most prominent figures in the needlepoint felt works that have earned her international acclaim. “My father was a general surgeon, and it’s not unusual that he would have also wanted me to do that,” shares the Indian-American artist, speaking from her home in Brooklyn. “I did one year in premed at Barnard College in New York City, and it just wasn’t for me. I’m squeamish around blood.”
Joseph's father, who hailed from Kerala and later made a life for himself in small-town Pennsylvania, passed away in 2015. By then, Joseph had scraped together an eclectic resume: she had a liberal arts degree from New York University and an associate degree in textile and surface design from the Fashion Institute of Technology, after which she spent a few years designing fabrics. Realising she preferred working with her hands rather than on a computer, she got another degree in arts education from the Rhode Island School of Design and went on to teach high school art for about 10 years. She was three days into a new job at an Ohio high school when her father passed away.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January - February 2026-Ausgabe von VOGUE India.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON VOGUE India
VOGUE India
Knit pick
The reliable knit is the MVP this winterarriving in all colours and proportions to meet the season's ever-changing demands.
1 min
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Going off script
Despite a successful acting debut at 18, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan is taking time to develop unusual hobbies, marvelling at the life she gets to live and learning that resting on her laurels is actually pretty rewarding.
7 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Three to tango
Mahaneela ChoudhuryReid, Kajal Patel and Fáiz Akindojuromi have managed to infiltrate the all-boys club of creative directors. And they're determined to leave the door open for others like them.
6 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
SUM OF ITS PARTS
Indians have been acing mathematics for centuries; just look at what we wear.
3 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
East meets West
What happens when you take Indian maximalism and put it on a minimalist? THEA MULCHANDANI wears a little too much jewellery to find out.
4 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
The lost city
Once, Bollywood sold us a version of Mumbai that was crammed with people but also with dreams and hopes. Today, amid construction and unemployment, that promise has begun to feel hollow.
4 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Work hard, play soft
Ahead of Cos's India debut, SADAF SHAIKH got an early look at the brand's autumn/winter 2025 collection during New York Fashion Week and realised there's something invitingly collaborative about its urban minimalism.
2 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Florals for all seasons
Florist to the stars, Sunny Chadha and Seema Bansal Chadha's luxury bloom house Venus et Fleur crafts hydrangeas, sunflowers and gardenias into wilt-proof arrangements.
3 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Being Jonita Gandhi
For the 35-year-old performer, the stage is as demanding as the gym. She talks endurance, mental wellness and why gratitude and deadlifts both matter.
4 mins
November - December 2025
VOGUE India
Field trip
From Grasse to Madurai, jasmine carries stories of fragility and endurance.
4 mins
November - December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

