The Kundan collection grounds itself in craft passed down through generations. Each set holds faceted glass stones set within fine metal and framed by meenakari enamel detailing. The effect is quiet yet present, a balance of form and light. These designs are meant for the everyday and the significant. They sit well with silk, with cotton, with inherited bangles and modern separates. This is ornament that becomes part of your rhythm, not just your occasion.
Kundan work begins with hammered gold foil set around faceted glass. The stones sit within a lac core, the jeweller pressing the foil into place without heat or adhesive. This technique evolved in the Mughal courts and later found ground in Rajasthan, where family ateliers shaped it into a living heritage. A single piece can require weeks of work, each stone placed by hand, then framed by the painted strokes of meenakari on the reverse. The result is jewellery that holds light and history, its weight deliberate, its presence earned.
These sets are built for movement. A choker stays secure through ceremony and celebration. A long necklace shifts easily from day to evening. The matte finish of the metal softens the gleam, so the pieces read as refined rather than loud. They pair with a khadi kurta as naturally as with a silk lehenga. This is the heart of everyday fearless luxury, jewellery that holds its poise through workdays, weddings, and quiet dinners, never needing the safety of a locker.
Choosing a kundan set is a quiet act of self definition. A rani haar signals a love for lineage. A sleek maang tikka worn off center suggests a mind of your own. The craft holds centuries of tradition, yet what you select and how you wear it reflects your own aesthetic. There is power in donning a piece rooted in collective memory and making it singular. You are not replicating a look. You are continuing a story, and the next chapter is yours.
Glass stones capture the light without harshness, holding a steady gleam through seasons of wear. The base metal alloy keeps its sheen with little care, so these pieces age well on your dressing table. A studded cuff or a layered pendant makes a thoughtful shaagun gift, the kind that carries meaning without ceremony. Explore the collection and find the form that speaks to you. An antique finish choker, a temple inspired jhumka, a pendant set for daily calm. These are pieces for the life you live, ready when you reach for them.
