About the Noori Mukesh Chanderi Kurti
There are pieces of clothing that carry light — not reflected light, not printed shimmer, not the flat gleam of synthetic embellishment, but actual living light that moves and shifts and catches differently from every angle, that makes the wearer seem lit from within rather than decorated from without. The Noori Mukesh Chanderi Kurti is that kind of piece. Mukesh work is one of Lucknow's most distinctive and most demanding embellishment crafts — tiny metal dots worked by hand into the fabric, each one placed individually, each one a small point of light that catches every source of illumination in a room and returns it as a soft, sparkling shimmer. It is not a bold or loud craft. It is a quiet one — its beauty cumulative, building stitch by dot by dot across the surface of the fabric until the whole piece seems to glow.
On Mul Chanderi — that most refined and most luminous of Indian weave fabrics, lightweight and sheer with a natural shimmer built into its very structure — Mukesh work achieves an effect that no other base fabric can produce. The Chanderi shimmer and the Mukesh sparkle work together rather than competing, each one amplifying the other, the whole surface of the kurti alive with a soft, layered light that is never garish, never overwhelming, always perfectly beautiful. The Kashmiri dyeing of the fabric adds a further dimension — the colour has a depth and a softness that plain dyeing cannot achieve, a quality that makes the Mul Chanderi ground look as though the colour has always been part of the fabric rather than applied to it. The Chikankari floral handwork across the yoke and chest sits above all of this — thread embroidery that adds its own texture and its own delicacy to a surface already rich with craft. This is the most layered and the most complex piece in the Noori collection. It shows.