Purple Brocade Banarasi Katan Silk Saree with Gold Zari Border

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This purple brocade Banarasi katan silk saree is designed with an intricate gold zari woven jaal pattern that spans across the saree, border, and pallu, creating a rich and detailed look. The craftsmanship highlights the elegance of traditional Banarasi weaving, making it an ideal choice for special occasions. The saree comes with a matching running unstitched blouse piece for custom tailoring.

Key Features:
• Brocade Banarasi Katan Silk Saree
• Color: Purple
• Gold Zari Woven Intricate Jaal
• Gold Zari Woven Border and Pallu
• Saree Length: 5.5 meters
• Blouse Material: ±90 cm
• Width: ±44 inches

Delivery within 35-40 business days. For urgent delivery, please contact us.

For additional services like blouse stitching & customization, kindly contact our team at +91 7705012088.
Note: Availing these services makes the product ineligible for exchange or refund.

Perfect for: Weddings, festive celebrations, and traditional gatherings.

Care Instructions: Dry clean only.

Please Note: Actual color may slightly vary from the image due to photography and lighting conditions.

Styling Tips: Pair this purple saree with gold jewelry and a matching clutch for an elegant wedding look.

 

SKU: BSS-111
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FAQs

Yes, while this purple Katan silk saree is bridal-coded enough for the main wedding day, brides also wear it for sangeet evenings, engagement ceremonies, and reception entries for a coordinated multi-function bridal look. The all-over gold zari brocade jaal photographs equally well under sangeet stage lighting and reception chandeliers, and styling it with different blouse colours or jewellery sets allows the same saree to read differently across each wedding event.
Banarasi Katan silk, used in this purple saree, is woven in Varanasi using lighter, finer silk yarns with gold zari brocade jaal designs typically drawn from Mughal and Persian aesthetic traditions, while Kanjivaram silk from Tamil Nadu uses heavier mulberry silk yarns and bold temple-border, contrast-pallu designs. Both are bridal-coded, but Banarasi Katan generally drapes lighter on the body and reads as more delicate and ornate up close than Kanjivaram.
The deep purple and gold zari combination of this Banarasi Katan saree styles beautifully with gold polki, kundan, or uncut diamond bridal jewellery sets, with emerald or pearl-drop accents to lift the purple base. For winter wedding lighting, pair with a hair bun, gajra, and a heavy maang tikka; for daytime ceremonies, opt for a side braid and a lighter maatha patti. A contrast gold, ivory, or emerald-green blouse is the stylist-recommended pairing.
A brocade jaal saree, like this purple Banarasi Katan piece with all-over gold zari weaving, carries more weight than a plain Banarasi silk saree due to the metallic zari content woven into the fabric across the body and pallu. The trade-off is the brocade jaal provides full bridal-coded richness without requiring additional embellishment. For brides choosing between brocade and plain Banarasi, the brocade is generally the preferred bridal-day pick.
Yes, purple has become one of the most preferred non-red bridal saree colours, particularly for brides drawn to royal, jewel-toned palettes. The purple Banarasi Katan silk with gold zari brocade jaal in this saree photographs especially well under both natural and artificial wedding lighting, contrasting beautifully with gold, polki, and emerald jewellery. For brides who want bridal richness without conforming to red, purple Banarasi Katan is a stylist-recommended choice.
The purple brocade Banarasi Katan silk saree with all-over gold zari jaal is particularly well suited as a bridal saree for wedding ceremonies, especially for brides choosing non-red bridal palettes. The dense brocade jaal across the body, border, and pallu provides full bridal-coded richness, making it appropriate for the main wedding day, court ceremonies, or temple weddings. Purple is also a recommended bridal pick for South Indian, Bengali, and Maharashtrian weddings where colour variety is traditionally welcomed.
The purple Banarasi Katan silk saree is woven from pure silk yarns and comes with a matching running unstitched blouse piece for custom tailoring. Chinaya Banaras's Banarasi pieces carry Silk Mark certification, a recognised industry assurance of pure silk content for serious handloom shoppers. The 5.5-metre saree length and 44-inch width follow standard bridal saree proportions, with a roughly 90 cm blouse piece included for matching tailoring.
While this purple brocade Banarasi Katan silk saree is denser than a tissue or organza alternative, it remains lighter on the shoulder than a heavily embroidered Kanjivaram or zardozi bridal saree, making it manageable for a full wedding-day pheras-to-vidaai sequence. Brides typically pair Banarasi Katan brocade with a secure pleated drape and an experienced saree drape professional on the day to keep the look set across hours.
A brocade Banarasi Katan silk saree like this purple piece is handwoven on traditional Varanasi pit looms using the kadhua or fekuwa technique, where gold zari motifs are woven into the silk base across the body, border, and pallu sections. Each saree can take weeks to complete depending on the density of the brocade jaal. Banarasi Katan brocade is a GI-tagged Indian handloom tradition and is recognised as a heritage textile craft.
The purple brocade Banarasi Katan silk saree is best suited for the main wedding day ceremony, court marriages, temple weddings, second-day receptions, sangeet evenings for the bride, and reception entries. It is also a preferred pick for sisters of the bride and mothers of the bride wanting bridal-adjacent richness, as well as for brides shopping for muh dikhai or paaki ceremonies in North Indian and Punjabi wedding traditions.