Poging GOUD - Vrij

Threads of identity

VOGUE India

|

September - October 2025

When embroidery plays witness to women's lives, the simplest form of the craft becomes an act of self-preservation.

- By DIVYA BALAKRISHNAN.

Threads of identity

Aman gets down on one knee.

A velvet box in his hand and four words on his lips. You can guess what happens next. Except, in a thatched hut in the desert of Kutch, I encountered a version of this famous scene with no ring, no mushy speech. Just a coconut instead of a solitaire and a piece of fabric waiting for a response.

During a visit to Kala Raksha, a community-run museum in Bhuj, the quiet significance of embroidered objects on display came into focus. In the Maru Meghwal community, a coconut and plain fabric are sent to the girl's family. If she agrees, she returns the coconut wrapped in the fabric, now embroidered by her hand. Though the motifs lean toward geometry, the family elders look beyond patterns. They examine colour, stitch tension and finish. Are the stitches straight? Do they seem rushed? Did she embroider alone or with her mother? The cloth offers no words but says everything.

imageThe Maru Meghwals migrated from Tharparkar in present-day Pakistan to Kutch in 1972. Their embroidery uses red and green thread on white cloth—the white symbolising an oasis in the dry desert. Peacocks are stitched in remembrance of Sindh, explains Mukesh Bhanani, senior project coordinator at Kala Raksha. The tradition of the engagement cloth, though slowly fading, still finds its place. Girls learn embroidery in their adolescent years and master it by 19. But they also attend school. Some pursue higher education; others navigate the spaces between paid labour, domestic work and craft. Proposals are no longer one-way gestures and yet, the cloth remains.

MEER VERHALEN VAN VOGUE India

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

THE JOY CHAPTER

With the best years of her career in front of her and a daughter she hopes to give the world to, Kiara Advani is stepping into her most intentional era yet: present, luminous and unmistakably herself.

time to read

7 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

THEY MADE HISTORY

The 2025 ICC World Cup didn't just crown new champions. It cracked open an old sporting order, pulling a country into its joy and rewriting what India believes is possible for its girls. In their first post-win interview, four pivotal members of the team speak with SUPRITA DAS about basking in the afterglow of their victory.

time to read

4 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

Word of South

Malayalam cinema is known for producing some of India's most progressive movies. MEERA GANAPATHI delves deeper to find the melting pot of cultures that allow these films to cook to perfection.

time to read

5 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

Homeward bound

Indian Americans Snigdha Sur and Neil Arora's celebrations traced their shared histories and emotional return to the land their families once left behind.

time to read

3 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

DOUBLE TAKE

What happens when twins begin to twin? Big fashion moments and a rewarding journey of parallel reinvention.

time to read

4 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

NEW LIGHT

FOR THE PAST five years, I have yearned in a way that would qualify as 'spiritually Gen Z', a high-schooler pining after a crush conjured up entirely in my mind.

time to read

2 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

Kin and kilos

Meals may be shared, but so is scrutiny. With GLP-1s on the table, thinness remains the prized serving in many homes.

time to read

4 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

BLAZY OF GLORY

The debut show of Chanel's new creative director, Matthieu Blazy, was both feverishly anticipated and rapturously received. NATHAN HELLER reports from inside the months-long preparations.

time to read

8 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

Heart felt

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.

time to read

3 mins

January - February 2026

VOGUE India

VOGUE India

All that glitters

At a sparkling Hollywood exhibition, Swarovski proves that glamour—like light— never truly fades.

time to read

3 mins

January - February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size