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Indian Brides Are Falling in Love With Ivory Wedding Looks

Something quietly radical is happening at Indian weddings. Brides are trading in centuries of red for something quieter, cleaner, and frankly more cinematic-white It feels especially of the moment in a year where soft, understated tones are dominating fashion conversations alongside Pantone’s Colour of the Year. What was once considered inauspicious is now the most aspirational shade on the shaadi circuit. And the latest high-profile wedding to prove the point? The stunning union of Revati Sule and Sarang Lakhani at the Jio World Convention Centre in Mumbai. 

The New Bride in Town: Revati Sule 

Revati Sule, daughter of NCP leader Supriya Sule and granddaughter of Sharad Pawar, arrived at her wedding looking every inch the modern Indian bride,  in a breathtaking ivory bridal lehenga-saree dripping with intricate embroidery and delicate embellishments. 

Rather than reaching for traditional red, she chose to step into her new chapter wrapped in a pristine ivory-white outfit that felt both deeply traditional and quietly revolutionary. Coordinated bridal jewellery completed her look, while pops of green glass bangles added that beloved desi touch, the kind of deliberate contrast that separates a thoughtful bridal look from a simply dressed one.  

Groom Sarang Lakhani matched the energy in an elegant white sherwani, accessorised with an emerald necklace, making the couple one of the most photographically perfect pairs we've seen walk a mandap in recent memory. 

 


Red Is Out. Ivory Is In. 

Of course, Revati isn't writing this trend from scratch; she's walking a path that some of Bollywood's most iconic brides have already paved. And what a gorgeous path it is.

Sonakshi's Something Borrowed, Something Ivory 

Sonakshi Sinha made headlines when she tied the knot with Zaheer Iqbal in June 2024, and not just for the surprise of the civil ceremony at her Bandra home. She walked in wearing her mother, Poonam Sinha's 44-year-old ivory chikankari saree, pairing it with her mother's choker necklace, traditional gajra, and delicate alta in place of mehendi. 


 It was, in the most literal sense, a heirloom moment, understated, emotionally loaded, and deeply personal. In an era of maximalism, Sonakshi chose nostalgia, and the internet wept happy tears.

Alia Bhatt: The Organza Bride Who Changed Everything 

If there's one bridal look that officially certified ivory as a serious contender for the Indian wedding circuit, it was Alia Bhatt's Sabyasachi ivory saree on April 14, 2022. A hand-dyed ivory organza drape with fine tilla work, paired with an embroidered handwoven tissue veil and Sabyasachi Heritage Jewellery featuring uncut diamonds and hand-strung pearls, it was minimal, it was exquisite, and it was a masterclass in letting the fabric do the talking. 


 The wedding date was even embroidered in gold zari into the saree. Alia wore zero heavy makeup and zero heavy jewellery, and yet somehow turned every head. She essentially told every bride-to-be: you don't need more, you need better. 

Gauahar Khan: The Gharara Bride 

Gauahar Khan's nikaah to Zaid Darbar in December 2020 gave us another unforgettable white moment. She chose a strikingly embellished ivory gharara by Pakistani label Laam, designed by Saira Shakira, featuring a knee-length kurta covered in sequins and matching borders on the dupatta, rich with that particular kind of old-world glamour that ghararas do best.


The look was topped with kundan and emerald jewellery, and the result was nothing short of regal. Zaid, naturally, twinned in an off-white sherwani with a Lucknowi print. Together, they looked like something out of a classic romantic miniature painting.

Isha Ambani: The Most Expensive White Lehenga in History 

No white bridal mood board is complete without Isha Ambani. For her wedding to Anand Piramal, Isha wore an ivory and golden Abu Jani Sandeep Khosla lehenga — reportedly the world's most expensive, valued at ₹90 crore, embedded with her mother Nita Ambani's 35-year-old wedding saree woven into the fabric.  


Heavily embellished with gold embroidery, sequins, and a fully embroidered net dupatta with handmade Kuran lace, it was spectacular in the way only the Ambanis can do. But at the heart of it was still that same quietly elegant choice: ivory over red, legacy over flash. 

Your White Wedding, Sorted: Our Picks from Aza 

If you've been quietly (or loudly) planning your own ivory moment, we've got you covered. From full-volume bridal lehengas to sarees that drape like a poem and sharara sets that blur the line between tradition and couture, the Aza edit has something for every kind of ivory bride. 

On the lehenga front, there's the off-white net and satin lehenga by Nitika Gujral. Replete with floral embroidery in sequins, beads, and crystals on a tasselled dupatta, the piece carries all the drama but none of the colour.

The Geisha Designs  off-white bridal lehenga set brings floral jaal motifs in thread, pearls, sequins, and 3D floral appliqués with a pleated frill skirt that has serious runway energy. 

 And for the bride who wants her silhouette to do the talking, the ivory fish-cut lehenga from the shelves of Sabe is all geometric 3D pearl and sequin embroidery — a contemporary, architectural take on bridal dressing that photograph spectacularly under any light. 

 


For the saree-first bride, the Ritika Mirchandani cutwork ivory saree is all wave-floral cutwork in net, crepe, and georgette with crystal and bugle embroidery, complete with a full-sleeve cutwork blouse — the kind of look that gets photographed from every angle. 

 The Seema Gujral off-white net saree with pearl tassels leans into paisley embroidery in tonal threads, sequins, and pearls, finished with pearl tassels at the waist and sleeve hem that flutter with every step, exactly the kind of detail that makes a mandap entrance truly unforgettable.  

And if you're drawn to a sharara silhouette à la Gauhar Khan, the Seema Gujral mauve jacket kurta sharara set with ivory thread and pearl embroidery is a stunning optiona soft mauve base with ivory detailing that straddles the line between classic and contemporary.

White isn't a compromise. It's a choice — and increasingly, it's the boldest one a bride can make. 

White Is the New Bridal Power Move

Brides are choosing white not because it whispers, but because it speaks differently. Ivory, off-white, and cream bring a kind of quiet drama that feels impossibly current, softer than red, but no less impactful.

They let the real artistry of a bridal look take centre stage, from intricate zardozi and chikankari to pearlwork, sequins, and heirloom embroidery that might otherwise get lost in a sea of crimson.

White also photographs like a dream, catches light beautifully, and moves effortlessly between minimal elegance and full-blown couture fantasy. Most of all, it gives brides room to rewrite tradition on their own terms, keeping the sentiment, the jewellery, the bangles, the rituals, and the grandeur, while choosing a colour that feels more personal, polished, and unmistakably modern.

 

Author

  • Shilpa Hazra, a wardrobe wordsmith and a proud mom of a spirited two-year-old, spins fashion stories that speak every language. Off the keyboard, she escapes into Rabindranath Tagore's poetic universe, stirs up flavorful tales in her kitchen and drafts silent stories from the corners of her favorite cafes.

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