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Go to the shopSitara sequins and fine beadwork scatter across this compact evening handbag, each disc anchored stitch by stitch onto the fabric panel by karigar workshops in northern India. It catches light. A detachable chain carries it from clutch to shoulder through an evening, and the compact size, room for a phone, a lipstick, keys, pairs as naturally with a saree as with a slip dress. For exact materials and dimensions, see the specifications.
slight variations in threadwork are part of its handmade appeal. Avoid contact with water and perfumes. Spot clean with a soft, dry cloth.
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
An embellished clutch is a statement. Let the bag lead, and keep the rest of the look quiet. Three ways to wear it.
For a wedding or reception, pair it with a saree or lehenga in a tone that picks up just one colour from the sequin work, then tuck it under the arm. Match the metallic clasp and chain to your jewellery rather than to the outfit, and the whole look reads intentional and considered rather than thrown together at the last minute.
For a cocktail evening, carry it with a slip dress or a tailored jumpsuit. Skip the heavy necklace. The sitara sequins are already doing the sparkling, so a slim envelope hold in the hand suits the strapless carry, and you clip on the chain only if you want both hands free for a drink and a plate.
For a daytime festive lunch, let it brighten an otherwise plain kurta or a linen co-ord. Keep the contents light. When the outfit is bold, hold the bag simply and let it recede; when the outfit stays restrained and quiet, let the bag make the entire statement on its own.
Surface embellishment is what gives this handbag its glint. The craft belongs to the family of Indian needle traditions in which sequins, beads, and thread are worked directly onto a stretched panel of fabric held taut on a frame.
First the design is traced onto the mounted fabric. Then the karigar begins. Each sitara sequin is anchored with a bead or a tiny knot so that it sits flat and does not slip, and this happens disc by disc, line by line, across the entire panel until the pattern is complete.
The finished panel is cut, lined, and stitched into the clutch form, then closed with a clasp and given a detachable chain. Denser coverage takes longer. For the exact fibre and embellishment composition of this particular piece, see the specifications.
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