
Meenakari
Jaipur-enamel inspiration, hand-finished in fashion jewellery.
Origin
Meenakari is the art of fusing coloured vitreous enamel — powdered glass mixed with metal-oxide pigments — onto a metal surface. The technique has Sassanid Persian origins; cloisonné-style enamelling on gold is documented in Achaemenid and Sassanid Persia well before the common era, and the verb *minā kāri* (enamel work) entered Persian-Mughal court vocabulary along with the artisans who practised it.
Meenakari was introduced to the Amer-Jaipur kingdom by Raja Man Singh I of Amer (r. 1589–1614), the Kachhwaha Rajput general in service of Akbar. Man Singh brought five enamellers from Lahore to Amer on a royal commission; their workshops, and the lineages descended from them, became the foundation of what is now the Jaipur enamel tradition. Other meenakari centres developed later — Bikaner, Varanasi (the *gulabi meena* pink palette), and Delhi — but Jaipur remained the principal workshop.
The Jaipur signature is bright, saturated colour on a hand-engraved gold or gold-plated base. Cobalt produces the famous peacock blue, chromium the emerald green, iron oxide the tomato red, and tin the opaque white. Each colour requires a different firing temperature, so a complex piece is fired three to five times — coolest colours first, hottest colours last — with hand-polishing between every pass.
The Jaipuri convention is two-faced: kundan-set stones on the visible face, meenakari enamel on the reverse. A bride sees the enamel against her neck; the world sees the stones. Today both faces are sometimes meant to be seen, as front-face enamel pieces have become a category of their own.
Nandai reinterprets these traditional steps in fashion-jewellery materials — gold-plated brass bases, kiln-fired enamel detailing, and kundan-style accents — making the Jaipuri silhouette accessible at fashion-jewellery prices.
How a traditional Meenakari piece is made.
- Step 1 illustration is pending workshop photography.
Khudai · engraving
The gold-plated metal base is hand-engraved with the floral or geometric pattern. The cells will hold the enamel colour.
- Step 2 illustration is pending workshop photography.
Meena bharna · enamel filling
Powdered glass mixed with metal-oxide pigment and a drop of water is packed into each engraved cell by hand with a fine quill.

Bhatti · kiln firing
The piece is fired at roughly 900°C until the glass melts and bonds to the metal. Cooler colours fire first, hotter colours last.
- Step 4 illustration is pending workshop photography.
Chamak · polishing
After the final firing the surface is polished with agate burnishers to bring up the deep glassy lustre meenakari is known for.
Our Meenakari-inspired edit.

Emerald Green Meenakari Luxury Jewellery Set - Antique Gold Plated Necklace for Mehendi & Receptions
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Meenakari Necklace Set | Rajwadi Luxury Gold-Plated Indian Jewelry
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Meenakari Necklace Set | Rajwadi Luxury Gold-Plated Indian Jewelry
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In the words of the master.
Three degrees too hot and the red turns black. Three degrees too cool and the blue never sets. The kiln does not forgive — only patience does.
Trained in traditional meenakari design, now crafting fashion-jewellery pieces that bring the silhouette to a wider audience.
TODO: commission a portrait + kiln-side interview with the named artisan, plus temperature-curve photography of a real firing.