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ACROSS GENERATIONS

The Heirloom Registry

Some sarees become family heirlooms. Register yours and we'll commemorate its journey across generations.

When you gift it to a daughter, daughter-in-law, or granddaughter, we update the registry — and she'll receive a personalized note from our atelier, with the weaver's signature and the saree's lineage.

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We use this only to commemorate your saree's journey. Your details stay with our atelier.

Recent registry entries

Drapes that crossed a generation, with permission of the families.

2025 · Wedding

Aanya Meera

A maroon kadhwa Katan, woven in 2018, gifted on her wedding day.

2025 · Coming-of-age

Priya Tara

An organza tissue Banarasi, passed on her sixteenth birthday.

2024 · Wedding

Ritu Sara

A double-pallu Banarasi, woven for the bride's grandmother in 1972.

2024 · Milestone birthday

Naina Ishita

A Tanchoi silk, the first saree the giver had ever bought herself.

2024 · Just because

Meera Anaya

A Banarasi linen, gifted to a daughter-in-law on a quiet Tuesday.

2023 · Wedding

Sunita Aditi

A kadhwa jangla woven by Iqbal-bhai, three months in the making.

Every registry entry includes a hand-pressed seal and a signed letter from our atelier in Varanasi.

WHY WE STARTED THE REGISTRY

A saree is meant to be passed on

In the Banarasi tradition, a great saree is rarely the wardrobe of one woman. It travels — from mother to daughter, from one wedding mandap to another, sometimes across continents. We built the Registry to honour that movement.

When you register a saree with us, it joins a quiet, permanent ledger that lives in our Varanasi atelier. We send a signed letter to the recipient. We keep the names and dates. We make sure the weaver's story travels with the cloth.

Learn how it works