Temple jewellery draws its motifs from the gopurams of the South, where dancing apsaras and sacred peacocks are rendered in warm gold tone. Each piece carries the weight of ritual, yet sits lightly on the skin. The nakashi work on a vanki armlet and the granulation on a guttapusalu haram turn personal milestones into shared heritage, worn often.
The craft begins with sketches of lotus medallions and yali figures, motifs sourced from temple pillars and processional bronzes. Artisans press warm gold tone alloy into fine sheets, then hand set kemp stones within raised rims using lac and foil. The back of a pendant reveals the same attention as the front, a hallmark of the jadau-inspired technique. A Lakshmi pendant or a pair of nadu kattam earrings is built layer by layer, each detail a note in a visual raga that honours centuries of sacred ornamentation.
Bridal styling often starts with the heavy kaasu mala and the oddiyanam waist belt, pieces that frame the silk sari and anchor the ceremony with their precise filigree. The weight is distributed through clever back-chain engineering, so the jewellery moves with the wearer during pheras and the exchanging of garlands. A maang tikka sits secure against the hair, while a nose ring stays light through the saat phere. These are ornaments for the seven steps and for the haldi gathering that follows, fearless in their daily relevance.
A broad temple choker paired with a cotton sari brings the antique gold tone to morning pujas and Diwali lunches. Removing the pendants from a chandbali turns it into a stud that works with a silk kurta for an evening satsang. The soft sheen of the gold work and the red of the kemp stones create a palette that adapts without losing its heritage voice. Choosing these pieces for a housewarming or a child's naming ceremony lets the wearer carry forward an aesthetic rooted in architecture and community.
MINAKI uses mixed alloys with a warm gold tone, lac, and glass stones to replicate the depth of solid gold ornaments without the cost or the locking away. The gold wash resists tarnish, and the stone settings are checked twice for snugness so the jewellery moves from vanities to velvet pouches without shedding a bead. It belongs at the wedding, then at the annual Varalakshmi vratham, and on every ordinary Tuesday that calls for a touch of temple grace.
