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What's in? An ultra-luxe home

Mint Kolkata

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August 23, 2025

The Indian consumer is both discerning and demanding and places an emphasis on custom-made home decor

- Sohini Dey

Classic meets kooky at luxury decor label L'Objet's store in Delhi's Chanakya mall. Take the Aegean collection, which features porcelain pieces handpainted in 24-carat gold and platinum—starting at ₹13,600 for a plain white porcelain saucer and touching ₹99,400 for gold-plated serving bowl. Or the Lorél picture frames (₹31,400 onwards), also plated in gold or platinum and studded with Swarovski crystals. The brand's collaborative line with American artists, the Haas Brothers, speaks a different language—despite its gilded details—as monsters, crocodiles and other fantastical figures transform into boxes, board games, incense burners, timers and cake stands with prices beginning at ₹16,800 and crossing ₹5 lakh.

Refinement and humour are both part of L'Objet's design vocabulary, says founder and creative director Elad Yifrach, who was in Delhi in May to announce the brand's India debut. "I tried to bring a beautiful mix that will give customers the full expression of what the brand is all about, and also give them the ability to show us what they like," says the Lisbon-based Yifrach.

A few months earlier, Baccarat, the French crystalware brand, opened its flagship boutique, also at The Chanakya. Historically catering to Indian royalty, Baccarat's recent retail expansion targets a new generation of luxury clients in the country. "What makes this moment in 2025 so compelling is how the spirit of the contemporary Indian luxury client mirrors the maison's own evolution," Alexandrine Reille-Linyer, export director of the brand, writes in an email. "There is a heightened sensitivity to heritage, a desire for experiences that carry meaning and a renewed appetite for excellence."

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