Prøve GULL - Gratis

Notting Hill to Kala Ghoda

THE WEEK India

|

October 01, 2023

London's famous Indian bridal wear boutique comes home to India

- NAMRATA ZAKARIA

Notting Hill to Kala Ghoda

Some of the best business ideas come from personal spaces. When Aashni Shah got engaged at 21, she was studying filmmaking in London. Like thousands of NRI brides before her, she actually had to travel to India to buy herself something festive to wear for her special day.

"Even if I wasn't looking at only designer clothes, there was just nothing nice to wear. There were stores in Southall and Wembley but they were awful. So I came to Mumbai and visited the Sabyasachi store in Kala Ghoda, and I fell in love," says Shah, now 37. This was circa 2012. Cut to 2023, and Shah has opened her first boutique in the same space, where Sabyasachi, India's most successful fashion designer stood until recently.

Shah realised that there was such a vast difference in how Indian designers made clothes and what was available in the UK, or elsewhere in the world. "Most of NRI fashion was crystals, and OTT embroidery and snake bindis and beehive hair," she says, laughing. Imagine the former Juhu resident show up like that! She was an editing intern at Prime Focus-a media services company that works with film studios, broadcast and advertising industries-since she was 18. She had told her family she was moving to London to pursue an MBA, but enrolled herself in film school instead. Soon enough, she realised the huge gap in the bridal wear market overseas, and rented out a small space in posh Notting Hill. This became Aashni & Co, the first and most well-regarded Indian bridal boutique outside India.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Identity assertion is still largely Limited to political and social spaces

Normally, no—it’s definitely a later construct.

time to read

2 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Made to measure

Madhav Agasti's memoir, like the clothes he has stitched for actors and politicians, is a 'fitting' tribute to his life—simple yet powerful

time to read

4 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

The bullshit detector

You don’t know how to use ChatGPT?” Ekya asked incredulously, her eyes wide as saucers. “Nana, everyone uses AI. I even got Waldo to help with some of my class assignments.”

time to read

3 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Rabindranath Tagore's legacy is lived, felt and practised in our daily lives

Rabindranath Tagore's legacy is lived, felt and practised in our daily lives

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

What we have today is 'maha jungle raj'

What do you think is the biggest issue in this election?

time to read

1 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

WHEN HEALER TURNED FIGHTER

A Padma Shri surgeon who spent 1,301 days in prison recalls his battle against the American justice system

time to read

6 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

We will make sure no one from Bihar needs to migrate

AFTER WEEKS OF BACKROOM negotiations, the grand alliance announced Tejashwi Yadav, 35, as its chief ministerial candidate, making him the principal challenger in the Bihar assembly election. The RJD's star campaigner and inheritor of his father's social justice legacy, Tejashwi has broadened his appeal to include jobs and development—what he calls “economic justice”.

time to read

6 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

When life gives you DDLJ

No creativity-enhancing pill in the market can do the trick as well as watching Hindi films without subtitles

time to read

2 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

THE PAST IS PRESENT

From Ashoka to Jarasandha, ancient emperors and mythic heroes are being recast through caste lines

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

The cortex

The cortex is the brain’s stage and its spotlight, a wrinkled sheet of grey matter where everything that makes us human performs. It is thin, standing only a few millimetres tall, and yet, it holds our language, laughter, memories, dreams, passwords, and grudges. Beneath it lies machinery; above it, personality. It's the surface that thinks. If the brain were Mumbai, the cortex would be South Bombay—dense, opinionated, elegant, and convinced it runs the place.

time to read

2 mins

November 09, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size