Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
India

In tiring election season, Modi made a style statement

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 11 May, 2014 02:58 PM
  • In tiring election season, Modi made a style statement
For a man who confesses to a penchant to "dress well" and claims his mixing and matching of colours is "god gifted", BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi is one of the few Indian politicians who have effortlessly managed to get discerning people's appreciation and women's attention by his sartorial elegance.
 
With his crisp, half-sleeved silk, khadi and linen kurtas and churidar pyjamas, coupled with finely-tailored Nehru jackets, often in bright, eye-catching colours, Modi is amongst a few leaders of independent India who have shunned the shabby and crumpled kurtas and dhotis/pyjamas - the staple political costume of the traditional Indian politician - and gone out to make a style statement. 
 
It has also drawn adverse attention as when Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav, a typical old-style politician who neither cares about his dress nor deportment, took a dig at him wondering how much time Modi would have for the country when he "changes 500 kurtas a day and wears a new kurta to every meeting". 
 
"What is wrong in Modi saying that he likes to dress well? I want to see our Indian leaders dress better. For too long have our leaders worn their sloppy sartorial manners and ill-fitting dresses as badges of austerity," said Kabir Alam, a 46-year-old fashion photographer based in Delhi.
 
"Look at how well-dressed international leaders are and how much pride they take in their dress sense. Some of our leaders look almost comic and lacking in sartorial etiquette at formal occasions by going out of their
way to defy dress codes at banquets and the like," Alam told IANS.
 
 
Agreed 24-year-old Anahita Choudhary, a student of the JD Institute of Fashion, who said that Indian politicians' must dress smart as the country is an
emerging superpower and its leaders must portray the country appropriately.
 
"Every politician wears the staple kurta with jackets but Modi is doing it with a difference. What would be interesting to see is if he becomes prime minister, how he represents India on the global stage," she added.
 
Admitting that she was not a fan of Modi's brand of politics, Choudhary said "you have to give credit where it's due" referring to the Gujarat chief minister's choice of wardrobe.
 
The fact that Modi has stuck to Indian attire and spiced them up instead of adorning western clothes has also been appreciated.
 
For Abhishek Bakshi, a 34-year-old advertising professional, Modi's style is chic and sauve and yet very Indian.
 
"You don't necessarily have to be wearing a tuxedo to look good. Modi has, with his choice of clothes and colours, spiced up the Indian attire," Bakshi told IANS.
 
"Among his contemporaries, he is the only one who experiments with different colours and his sense of colour coordination is brilliant," he added.
 
Modi's Nehru jackets have become quite popular. "Nehru jackets are really in nowadays and be it youngsters or elders, everyone is following the trend," Ruchi Verma, 21 a student at Noida's Satyam Fashion Institute, said.
 
Delhi based designer Samanth Chauhan too is a fan.
 
"The bright coloured Nehru jackets that Modi is wearing are really making a statement," he said.

MORE India ARTICLES

BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack

BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack
BJP candidate Muruganandam and at least 30 other people were injured in an attack Monday while they were campaigning in the Thanjavur Lok Sabha constituency in Tamil Nadu, the party said.

BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack

A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

It's true. People of this Pakistan want Narendra Modi to become prime minister of India. ...

A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party

Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party
I have an abiding memory of Manmohan Singh. It goes far back to the days when he was not the prime minister, not even the finance minister, when in the early '90s he took transformational steps to open up and liberalise a collapsing Indian economy and got his name etched in the history of global economics.

Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party

Claims of files being seen by Sonia baseless: PMO

Claims of files being seen by Sonia baseless: PMO
The Prime Minister's Office Sunday dismissed as "baseless and mischievous" claims by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's former media adviser Sanjaya Baru that its files were seen by Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

Claims of files being seen by Sonia baseless: PMO

Two arrested for racist remark against northeastern student

Two arrested for racist remark against northeastern student
Amit Kumar, 22, and Akash Kumar, 23, both residents of Bihar's Chhapra, were arrested after Hemang Haokip, 25, complained against them for the racist comment made midnight.

Two arrested for racist remark against northeastern student

WATCH: Narendra Modi comes clean on wearing skull cap, Puppy remark

WATCH: Narendra Modi comes clean on wearing skull cap, Puppy remark
Appearing on India TV's show, Aap Ki Adalat, Modi, in an affable mood, said that he would not wear a skull cap in order to imitate other politicians in appeasing the Muslims and "hoodwinking" them. He said he rather believed in educating Muslims, that they should hold the Quran in one hand and a computer in the other.

WATCH: Narendra Modi comes clean on wearing skull cap, Puppy remark