News Entertainment Bollywood Meera, Muzzafar Ali keep it traditional, elegant at India Bridal Fashion Week

Meera, Muzzafar Ali keep it traditional, elegant at India Bridal Fashion Week

New Delhi, July 25 : Filmmaker Muzaffar Ali and his designer wife Meera showcased an exotic Awadh inspired couture collection on the second day of India Bridal Fashion Week.(IBFW) here, impressing many with the clothes

meera muzzafar ali keep it traditional elegant at india bridal fashion week meera muzzafar ali keep it traditional elegant at india bridal fashion week
New Delhi, July 25 : Filmmaker Muzaffar Ali and his designer wife Meera showcased an exotic Awadh inspired couture collection on the second day of India Bridal Fashion Week.



(IBFW) here, impressing many with the clothes which were sans the typical bridal bling and bright colours. The collection entitled 'Pearls on Oriental Forms' saw models sashaying down the ramp gracefully in lehengas, shararas, sarees, anarkalis and pharsi pyjamas.

Keeping the colour palette subtle with hues of white, beige, peach and light green was a conscious choice for Meera, who wanted to take a break from the  "typical wedding colours".

 "Our inspiration has always been Awadh and this time too we kept true to our roots. We tried to break from the typical red, orange and pink, which was a challenge.

"This is the first time we have experimented with pastel shades. With this collection, I picture an evolved, elegant and understated bride who is ready to experiment," Meera told PTI.

The collection was found quite wearable by many and was a breather after Day One's high-on-bling couture. Meera brought the spirit of Awadh alive with her intricate chikan, zardozi work on georgette and velvet fabrics.

The designer also teamed long embroidered jackets with sarees and shararas, giving a contemporary look to the outfits.

Adding to the structured clothes was the perfect combination of jewellery like maang-tikkas, naths, and delicate necklaces. For their men's collection, the duo kept it safe and simple with black and white bandh gala over fitted pants and sherwani.

As their collection spoke volumes, Meera didn't want to shift the focus from it and avoided having any B-town celebs walking the ramp for them.