
Temple Jewellery Set
Temple-jewellery-inspired pieces — Rajasthani and South-Indian temple silhouettes reinterpreted in our antique-gold finish. Statement weight in lightweight plating, for the wardrobe that wants the heritage look without the heritage care routine.
When two traditions meet on one bench.
The Mixed collection is what happens when a single piece combines two or more techniques — Kundan-and-Meenakari on the same bridal choker, Polki-and-temple-work on a single maang tikka, Rajputi layout with Kundan stone-setting. These are the pieces that take longest to make because they pass through more bench specialists.
A typical Mixed piece spends a week at the Kundan setter's bench, another week with the meena painter, three days at the kiln, then back to the gold-plater for the final polish. Six weeks for a complex bridal set is realistic.
What to wear it with. Mixed pieces work hardest on photo-heavy occasions where the close-up matters — reception, engagement, formal portrait. The detail rewards a second look; a guest at the same wedding will see something new in the piece when they sit next to you at the dinner table.
Provenance note. Every Mixed piece is documented per-technique on the product page — which artisan did which step, what materials, what firing temperature. We have receipts for every claim. (See our NO-CHEATING rule.)
Six weeks. Two techniques. One bride.
Our atelier's pick for this collection

Kundan Necklace Set - Bihari Bridal Necklace with Elephant & Emerald Design


