Before the Wedding Begins
Every Indian wedding has a moment that doesn’t belong to the ceremony.
It arrives before the venue fills, before rituals find their order, before silence is asked for. Music travels ahead of people. Laughter breaks out without permission. Some join the movement instantly, others follow slowly, observing before stepping in.
This is the moment Baraat holds.
At its centre runs a procession in miniature — figures carved one by one in 92.5 sterling silver, each caught mid-gesture. No two bodies move the same way. Some lean forward with purpose. Some pause. Some sway simply because the rhythm exists. Together, they form a baraat as it truly is — unplanned, uneven, alive.
Around this movement, the surface becomes structured. Patterns settle the energy, giving shape to celebration without taking it away. Much like the rituals that soon arrive, grounding what would otherwise spill endlessly forward.
This is not the wedding itself.
It is what comes before it.
The noise before silence.
The laughter before vows.
The moment where joy is at its most honest, because nothing has been asked of it yet.
Baraat carries this anticipation forward — not as memory alone, but as presence. A piece meant to be taken into moments where happiness appears early, gathers freely, and stays longer than expected.
Because long after the ceremony is over, this is the part people remember.