Let customers speak for us
FREQUENTLY BOUGHT TOGETHER
Recently viewed
FAQs
Yes, one of the practical advantages of Banarasi silk co-ord sets like this raspberry pink piece is that each component can be re-worn separately to expand wardrobe utility. The blazer styles as a statement layer over plain black trousers for cocktail events, the crop top pairs with a contrasting Banarasi or organza skirt for sangeets, and the wide-leg pants work with a plain silk shirt for festive office wear. Three pieces, multiple looks.
Yes, brides regularly choose Banarasi silk co-ord sets like this raspberry pink piece for their own sangeet, cocktail, and mehndi-after-party events when they want bridal-coded richness with Indo-Western silhouette. The raspberry pink base photographs vibrantly under stage and chandelier lighting, the aari floral jaal adds bridal handwork detail, and the structured three-piece silhouette gives the bride freedom to dance, mingle, and move comfortably across the evening.
Yes, this raspberry pink Banarasi silk co-ord comes as a complete three-piece set including a sleeveless crop top of 24.5-inch length, a matching blazer with 20.5-inch sleeves featuring dori work and stone embellishments, and wide-leg pants of 42-inch length. The fully coordinated set removes the styling friction of matching separates, making it a high-convenience purchase for women wanting a polished Indo-Western look without piece-by-piece sourcing.
A Banarasi silk co-ord set like this raspberry pink piece uses a structured crop top, tailored blazer, and wide-leg pants format styled together as a coordinated three-piece, whereas a kurta-pant suit follows a traditional tunic-and-bottom silhouette. The co-ord format reads as Indo-Western and styles modern, while a kurta suit reads as traditionally ethnic. For women wanting fashion-forward ethnic dressing, co-ord sets are the preferred contemporary pick.
For winter cocktail evenings, style this raspberry pink Banarasi silk co-ord with statement chandbalis, a sleek high ponytail, and metallic heels for a confident reception-night look. For summer sangeet brunches, swap the blazer for a draped Banarasi dupatta over the crop top and pants, and add pearl jewellery for a softer daytime aesthetic. For Diwali parties, complete with a contrasting velvet potli bag, polki earrings, and a side-parted hair fall.
A blazer-style co-ord like this raspberry pink Banarasi piece is significantly easier to style, accessorise, and wear across a sangeet evening than a heavy lehenga, particularly when the venue involves dancing, dinner, and standing-room mingling. The wide-leg pants allow free movement, the blazer can be removed for indoor sangeet settings, and the sleeveless crop top photographs cleanly. For sangeet-night comfort with bridal-adjacent richness, co-ords are a recommended pick.
Yes, Banarasi silk co-ord sets like this raspberry pink piece have become a stylist-recommended modern alternative to sarees and lehengas for younger women in their 20s and 30s who want ethnic richness with contemporary tailoring. The blazer-and-pants format styles as Indo-Western, works across cocktail, sangeet, and engagement events, and is significantly easier to wear, walk, and dance in than a traditional lehenga. The antique aari work keeps it culturally rooted.
Yes, this raspberry pink co-ord set is tailored from Banarasi silk fabric handwoven in Varanasi, with the antique aari floral jaal embroidery applied on top of the silk base. The silk yardage forms the foundation, while the aari, dori, and stone work are layered as hand-applied surface embellishment. Banarasi silk co-ords are valued for combining heritage handloom fabric with modern Indo-Western tailoring, making them a recommended pick for contemporary ethnic wardrobes.
The raspberry pink Banarasi silk three-piece co-ord set with antique aari floral jaal, sleeveless crop top, dori-and-stone blazer, and wide-leg pants is particularly well suited for cocktail evenings, modern wedding receptions, sangeet brunches, and Indo-fusion engagement parties. The pant-suit silhouette photographs as confidently contemporary, while the Banarasi silk base and aari handwork retain enough cultural richness for ethnic-coded events. It is a preferred pick for women wanting modern bridal-adjacent dressing.
Aari work is a traditional Indian embroidery technique using a hooked needle to create chain-stitch patterns from the back of the fabric, allowing dense, intricate floral jaal designs across large fabric panels. The antique aari floral jaal on this raspberry pink Banarasi silk co-ord runs across the crop top, blazer, and pants, layered with dori work and stone embellishments on the blazer. It represents multiple traditional handwork techniques in one Indo-Western piece.
The raspberry pink Banarasi silk co-ord set is best suited for cocktail evenings, sangeet parties, modern wedding receptions, engagement after-parties, mehndi brunches, anniversary celebrations, Diwali cocktail events, festive office parties, and Indo-fusion gatherings. The blazer-pant-crop-top format reads as contemporary across both ethnic and semi-formal contexts, making it a high-utility addition for women building a versatile cocktail-and-festive wardrobe beyond traditional sarees and lehengas.









