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Love, Light, and Legacy: Inside Abhinav Mishra’s New Couture Chapters

Shweta Kulkarni Darpan, 17 Jul, 2026 02:40 PM
  • Love, Light, and Legacy: Inside Abhinav Mishra’s New Couture Chapters

Abhinav Mishra has built a distinctive design universe that seamlessly brings together his passion for traditional craftsmanship, storytelling, and Indian celebration. Renowned for reviving and reimagining traditional mirror work for a new generation, the designer has spent years refining the craft through extensive research, travel, and close collaborations with artisans across North India, allowing it to evolve while remaining rooted in tradition. Continuing his love affair with mirror work, Mishra recently unveiled two new collections—Baradari: Bridal 2026 and The Queen's Palace: Couture 2026. 

While Baradari is a cinematic celebration of the Indian wedding and the bonds that make those moments meaningful, The Queen's Palace expands that narrative into a world inspired by India's historic queens' palaces, where light, music, artistry, and grandeur come alive. Distinct in mood yet connected in spirit, the collections reflect Mishra's ongoing exploration of love, togetherness, and the joy of celebration. For Mishra, Baradari and The Queen's Palace are not standalone collections, but significant chapters in a larger narrative that has shaped his eponymous label. 

“For me, these collections are all part of a larger emotional journey that the brand has been exploring over the last few years. One Love in 2025 was about the idea that love transcends boundaries and communities. Whereas our Tribe collection explored belonging, connection, and the idea that we are all part of something larger than ourselves. Baradari: Bridal 2026 continued that conversation through the lens of the Indian wedding, celebrating family, friendship, community, and the collective joy that exists when people come together. The Queen’s Palace: Couture 2026 naturally becomes the next chapter in that story. If Baradari celebrates the coming together of people, The Queen’s Palace imagines the world where those celebrations unfold. Inspired by India’s historic Queen’s Palaces, from Jodha Bai’s Palace in Fatehpur Sikri and Jaipur’s Hawa Mahal to the Maharani Palace within Mubarak Mandi and the Zenana quarters of Mehrangarh Fort, the collection explores spaces that were once filled with ceremony, artistry, music, and celebration,” explains Mishra. 

He adds, “Creatively, Baradari is rooted in the wedding itself, while The Queen’s Palace expands into a larger couture universe of glamour, light, music, and imagination. Emotionally, they remain connected through the same values of love, togetherness, and celebration." 

At its core, the collections are anchored in the idea of bonds of love; reflecting a belief that love sits at the center of everything—not just in romantic terms, but in the relationships that shape everyday life. “Love, celebration, and togetherness have always been at the center of the brand. In many ways, every collection explores those themes through a different lens,” says Mishra. 

Mishra’s exquisite silhouettes reflect that spirit. Baradari is built around classic bridal and occasion wear silhouettes. Expansive lehengas, structured blouses, regal veils, sherwanis, and timeless celebratory dressing are central to the collection because the narrative is deeply connected to the wedding itself. 

With The Queen’s Palace, the silhouettes become more fluid and contemporary. “We explored voluminous occasion wear, softer drapes, contemporary Indo-western separates, sculpted forms, dramatic capes, and statement couture pieces. The silhouettes reflect a world inspired by movement, glamor, light, and celebration while remaining rooted in craftsmanship,” Mishra informs. 

The collections also signal a refinement in the designer's aesthetic vocabulary. Heritage craftsmanship remains central, but it is layered with contemporary construction, aristocratic influences, subtle Mongolian references, and a heightened sense of structure and proportion. 

Mirror work, the defining element of the Abhinav Mishra universe, takes on new dimensions in these collections. Signature embroidery is enriched through intricate hand techniques, tonal textures, couture-level detailing, and the introduction of crystal embellishments that add luminosity and depth. 

“Mirror work has always been the foundation of the brand and remains the craft language I feel most deeply connected to,” he says. “Since the very beginning, I have been committed to reviving and reinterpreting the craft in ways that feel relevant to contemporary India. With Baradari, mirror work was explored through rich bridal craftsmanship, layered embroidery, traditional techniques, and celebratory detailing. In The Queen’s Palace, we evolved that language further through crystals, stones, geometric motifs, and contemporary placements inspired by the way light interacts with reflective surfaces. While the techniques continue to evolve, the intention remains the same: to celebrate mirror work as a living craft and continue pushing its possibilities through new forms of storytelling and design.” 

If Baradari is about the arrival of celebration, then The Queen's Palace is where that celebration resides. And together, the collections represent more than bridalwear and couture. They form two interconnected chapters in an ongoing story rooted in craftsmanship and united by a belief that fashion is ultimately about bringing people together. In Abhinav Mishra's world, clothes are only the beginning; the real magic lies in the memories, emotions, and celebrations they help create. 

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