She walked into Wankhede Stadium on a Thursday evening, and the cameras couldn't look away — not just because of who she was waiting for, but because of how she looked doing it. Samreen Kaur, Punjabi actress, former Femina Miss India Jammu & Kashmir finalist, and currently the most-talked-about woman in Indian cricket circles, is quietly becoming one of the most watched style personalities in the country.
And honestly? We've had our eye on her for a while.
The Girl Who Was Always More Than a Rumour
Before the viral Snapchat photos. Before the Chandigarh Airport sightings. Before she was spotted cheering at IPL matches for Punjab Kings' star pacer Arshdeep Singh — Samreen Kaur had already built a world for herself.
Born in Jammu and Kashmir in 2000, she entered the fashion world young, cutting her teeth on ramp walks and TV commercials before stepping onto the national stage at Femina Miss India 2018. That early grounding in fashion gave her something most actresses have to spend years developing: an instinctive, effortless sense of how to wear a look rather than just put one on.
From the Big Screen to the Big Leagues
Samreen's filmography reads like a checklist of cultural moments. She appeared in 83, Kabir Khan's beloved retelling of India's 1983 World Cup victory, starring alongside Ranveer Singh and Ammy Virk. She starred in the legal thriller Nail Polish opposite Arjun Rampal. She featured in Sardaar Ji 2 with Diljit Dosanjh.
And in between? Music videos with Badshah, Guru Randhawa, and Maninder Buttar — the kind of work that demands you know exactly how to move, how to emote, and above all, how to dress for the camera.
At every step, her wardrobe has spoken a language that blends Punjab's rich textile heritage with a thoroughly modern sensibility. That, right there, is the Aza language.
The Aza Woman & the Samreen Kaur Vibe
At Aza Fashions, we've always believed that Indian fashion isn't one thing. It's the hand-embroidered phulkari of Punjab sitting next to a sleek contemporary silhouette. It's the bride who wants tradition without compromise, and the woman at a stadium who wants to turn heads without trying too hard.
Samreen Kaur embodies exactly that duality.
Whether she's stepping out for a Gurudwara visit or making a low-key airport appearance that somehow ends up on every entertainment page, her aesthetic is rooted — culturally, emotionally — while remaining entirely current. That's the edit we curate every season at Aza.
For the Samreen in you, we love:
Pastel anarkalis that travel beautifully from day events to evening celebrations
Contemporary Punjabi suits with subtle embroidery — festive without being overdressed
Sharara sets that feel both traditional and effortlessly modern
Minimal gold jewellery that lets the outfit lead
Style That Belongs to No One's Story But Your Own
What makes Samreen Kaur compelling — beyond the headlines — is that she has consistently held her own narrative. She addressed rumours with grace, separated her personal life from her professional identity, and kept showing up: to film sets, to music videos, to stadiums, to airports — always put-together, always herself.
That kind of quiet confidence? You can't buy it. But you can dress for it.
At Aza Fashions, every piece in our collection is designed for the woman who walks into a room and owns it — not because she demands attention, but because she simply doesn't need to ask for it.
Shop the Vibe
This season, Aza brings you an edit that's equal parts rooted and runway-ready — think rich Punjabi textiles reimagined in contemporary cuts, bridal lehengas with a modern soul, and everyday Indian wear that's as comfortable in a Gurudwara as it is at a stadium.
Because style, like Samreen, doesn't wait for the right moment. It creates one.
Explore the latest collection at Aza Fashions .
