Onam fashion: Go bold and beautiful with your 'onakkodi' Festival Outfit this year

Floral prints, animal motifs, quirky letterings. Onam wear has seen many changes. Here’s where Delhi can take style notes from.
Onam fashion: Go bold and beautiful with your 'onakkodi' Festival Outfit this year
Onam fashion: Go bold and beautiful with your 'onakkodi' Festival Outfit this year

When one speaks of Onam, what immediately comes to mind, besides delectable sadyas and inspiring pookkalams, is onakkodi, the traditional attire. However, in a departure from the norm, the cream and off-white of this traditional wear have given way to bright hues, decorated with floral prints, block designs and more. TNIE brings you some of the designs that are turning heads.

 

Revathy Jayan Babu, who runs a design label of the same name in Thiruvananthapuram, has employed animal prints to deck up her collection, Kalki.  

Leopard prints and tiger face designs — both hand-embroidered and patchworked on conventional attires — infuse some swag into the otherwise classic elegance of the fabric. “Kalki line is inspired by pulikali, a rich cultural art form that echoes the Onam spirit,” she says.

Her other collection, Vadamalli, boasts jumpsuits, sharara suits, casual dresses, etc. “For the men’s range, the floral motifs are hand-embroidered on collars and sleeves,” the designer adds.

Experimenting with applique patterns with traditional kasav this year is prolific Kochi-based designer Sreejith Jeevan with his venture Rouka. His latest collection, ‘Thy Garden Come,’ boasts a range adorned with elements of a garden filled with flowers, butterflies and dragonflies.

Handloom magic
Florals on handloom fabric. This is the speciality of Southloom.com, a designer label based in Thiruvananthapuram.

The boutique offers hand-painted, intricate floral designs on gold and silver tissue handloom sarees. “Besides florals, we have also seen an interest in Jaipur prints on handloom sarees,” says Raj Baiju, the owner. For those who love to stick with classic handlooms, the shop also boasts the classy Balaramapuram Unakkupaavu handloom saree and dhoti.

At Weavers Village, a Thiruvananthapuram-based offline and online handloom boutique, the focus this year is on curating a sustainable fashion collection that features the ‘people around us’. 

“The portraits of the people who have inspired the clients will be painted as customised designs on the men’s and women’s wear of this collection. In addition to this, we will also launch a version wherein we have the portraits of strong women of our society embroidered on handloom sarees and dhavani sets,” said Shobha Viswanath, the chief designer of the venture.

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