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Go to the shopThis front-open button kurta wears like a layer and a statement at the same time. Hand embroidery runs across a brown and black base, thread detailing that reads quiet up close and graphic from clear across a crowded room.
The open placket and the full line of buttons let you throw it over a camisole, a plain tee, or a slim kurti. It moves from desk to dinner. The work is done by skilled karigars and finished for real, repeated wear that does not give out after a season.
Crafted from breathable cotton with fine embroidery Avoid bleach and harsh detergents, and dry in shade to preserve quality
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
A front-open kurta is really three garments in one. Worn buttoned to the top, it reads as a clean straight kurta. Left open, it becomes a layering piece, almost like a long jacket over whatever sits underneath.
For everyday wear, button it most of the way and pair it with straight jeans or cigarette pants. Roll the sleeves once. Slip on juttis or white sneakers and you have a look that moves from a morning class to a coffee meeting.
For a dressier outing, leave the placket open over a fitted camisole or a slim base kurti, then add palazzo pants or a churidar below. A thin tan belt at the waist gives the open silhouette some shape if you prefer definition. Silver jhumkas and a single stack of bangles keep the focus on the embroidery rather than competing with it.
For an occasion, treat the open kurta as the hero layer over a contrast inner and tailored trousers. Brown and black sit easily beside ivory, mustard, deep green, and rust, so your accessories have room to play.
If you are petite, a half-tuck of the inner layer keeps the length from overwhelming your frame. While wearing, mind that thread embroidery can snag on rough bag straps or velcro, so carry structured bags rather than anything abrasive.
This kurta begins as a length of breathable, everyday cloth, the kind of base typically chosen so the garment stays light through a full day and through repeated washing. For the exact fabric composition, see the product specifications.
The embroidery is the heart of the piece. It is worked by hand in thread, stitch after stitch building the motifs that run across the brown and black ground. Hand embroidery of this kind is slow by nature. A single panel can hold a karigar for hours, and no two finished pieces line up identically, which is the honest signature of work done by a person rather than a machine.
The front-open construction is its own small craft. The placket has to be cut and stitched so the two front edges meet cleanly, the buttonholes have to sit evenly down the line, and the collar and shoulders have to hang square whether the kurta is worn open or closed. Get any of that wrong and the open silhouette sags. Done right, it falls straight on both sides.
After the embroidery and the assembly, the kurta is pressed, the loose threads are trimmed, and each button is checked on its shank. The piece is made within an artisan cluster and finished for a wardrobe that gets used, not one that sits in a box.
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