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COVER STORY I WEDDING I JEWELLERY

THE DREAM MERCHANTS FOUR JAIPUR HOUSES OF JEWELLERY CHART THE CHANGING FACE OF THE BRIDAL AESTHETIC WITH TOP TRENDS FOR THE COMING WEDDING SEASON

Carved emeralds or workmanship on stones is popular and has ardent fans.

The big polki look is all done; coloured stones define the new look with blue tanzanites leading the trend

O

f all the wedding wows, none captures desire more provocatively or portrays passion more consummately than jewellery. The dazzling dance of metal and stone has evolved through legend and lore to move beyond price and investment to craftsmanship and exclusivity. The new bridal aesthetic wears its vanity not lightly but tastefully. Where less is more and statement pieces rule, we chronicle four houses of jewellery, all from Jaipur, that have redefined the changing face of this sparkle saga. From a 280-year-old brand that furnished the whims of Rajputana royalty to a brand only 17 years old that’s already designing for the royal family of Abu Dhabi, these dream catchers bedeck Hollywood beauties and Bollywood stars alike.

tarang arora,

creative director, amrapali jewels

neckpiece from the wedding collection by anamika khanna sports carved emeralds, antique naths and a watch bracelet-inspired chain

Photograph by RAJWANT RAWAT

TRIBAL TURNS TABLES

50 INDIA TODAY SPICE u OCTOBER, 2016

Single colour is back on trend as opposed to multi-coloured jewellery that dominated for a while

Combination of different mediums, such as gold and silver, for instance, even for wedding jewellery is big; even black gold with a vintage look is here to stay

BY CHUMKI BHARADWAJ

If you can still vividly recall the golden heave of Brad Pitt’s architectural chest in a cobalt blue toga as Achilles, in Troy, but fail to remember the beaten gold, engraved neckpiece he sports, your national pride could be called into question, because all the jewellery worn by Achilles, Helen, Hector and Paris was designed by Jaipur-based jewellery powerhouse Amrapali. If that doesn’t make your chest swell with pride, it should at least surprise you to know that the fairly young brand (founded in 1978) had its roots in the quiet bylanes of Chameliwala bazaar in Jaipur. A non-descript market, “where the Amrapali shop was the last stop on the deadest lane of

Amrapali

the market,” says Tarang Arora, 35, creative director of the company. The house of Amrapali, better known for translating a tribal aesthetic to a fashion imperative, began as a rebellion that forced two best friends studying history to strike out on their own. While Rajeev Arora came from a family of doctors and lawyers, Rajesh Almira’s family traded in emeralds. The latter just couldn’t see himself assessing and cutting green stones all his life. So the journey began when the two started trading in handicrafts since Jaipur was a big hub; jewellery was not even a sparkle in their imagination at this point. A year and half in to their business, while in Delhi, someone told them about a great demand

for garnets, a stone that was cut in Jaipur. They decided to explore the lure of the garnet and discovered a whole world of jewellery in the quest. So, by 1981-82, the duo started selling bits of jewellery. They would travel to different parts of the state and observe what jewellery the tribal women were wearing. “At this point, there wasn’t anyone who was interested in making tribal jewellery into a fashion statement. They would visit sarafa (pawn) shops to buy beautiful jewellery. They would, say, dismantle a necklace that had 14 pendants and make it into seven earrings,” says Arora. The idea was that if they simply redesigned the necklace, they could sell it to one client but this way

OCTOBER, 2016 u INDIA TODAY SPICE 51


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