Maison Jai

Festival Morning / Jaipur

Clothes that enter the ritual before the room.

Maison Jai designs Indian fabrics and ethnic silhouettes for moments of gathering: rangoli mornings, haldi courtyards, family pujas, and dinners that turn into memory.

View the festive edit
01

Morning Puja

Soft ivory cotton, a block-printed dupatta, brass light, and a silhouette that lets the body move.

02

Haldi Courtyard

Ochre and marigold tones, easy kurtas, and pieces made to carry color without becoming costume.

03

Evening Visit

Indigo overlays and structured shirts that travel from family rituals to modern dinners.

Pieces for the rituals around dressing.

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Model wearing a kurta
01

Kurtas & Tunics

Easy forms for puja mornings, travel days, and long family meals.

Model wearing an ethnic look
02

Dupattas & Overlays

Light layers that carry color into a room.

Model wearing an ethnic printed set
03

Co-ord Sets

Balanced pieces for festive ease.

Ethnic pieces with everyday permanence.

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Model wearing marigold hand-block kurta

Marigold Hand-Block Kurta

Organic cotton / balanced ease

Model wearing indigo courtyard shirt

Indigo Courtyard Shirt

Printed linen / classic collar

Model wearing gulabi overlay set

Gulabi Overlay Set

Light layers / festive drape

Model wearing bone white puja tunic

Bone White Puja Tunic

Quiet texture / soft hem

Model wearing Indian festive clothing

From haldi yellow to indigo evenings.

A seasonal edit of cotton, linen, and print-led garments for the Indian calendar.

“It felt festive without feeling heavy.”

“The kurta moved beautifully through a full puja morning and dinner after.”

Akshara, Jaipur

“The print feels traditional, but the fit is clean enough for everyday wear.”

Meera, Delhi

“The fabric softened after the first wear. It already feels personal.”

Naina, Mumbai
Hands holding fabric swatches beside a jharokha

Every print keeps a little evidence of the hand.

Pressure, pigment, cotton, and repetition are not hidden at Maison Jai. They are the reason a garment feels personal before it is even worn.

Read the craft story

A window into the traditions that dress us.

Rangoli Color Brass Light Marigold Thread Cotton Memory

Stories behind what we wear.

Read all notes
Maison Jai craft table with textile swatches

Why the hand-block mark matters.

The print is not surface decoration. It is pressure, rhythm, and human memory.

Maison Jai printed fabric in a courtyard

Dressing for the Indian home.

How kurtas, dupattas, and soft sets move through ritual, hosting, and celebration.

Founder’s Note

The permanent wardrobe begins with respect.

Respect for fabric, for the maker, for tradition, and for the guest who enters the Maison.