Tara Sutaria Grazia Magazine Download Tara Sutaria Photoshoot For Grazia Magazine Tara Sutaria Grazia Magazine Photoshoot Tara sutaria on grazia magazine grazia magazine cover january 2020
Tara Sutaria on Grazia Magazine cover January 2020
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24 Year old B-Town Actress Tara Sutaria Photoshoot for Grazia Magazine. Tara gave Glamour Look in different Dresses. This special issue for Grazia Return to Nostalgia Dressing.
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The Modish Touch
while we scan through the overly done traditional Indian pieces in the market, this contemporary label is bringing something unconventional to the table. Fuel is quite the option for millennials who want to amp up their style game come festive season. Whether it's a risque cut work blouse to pair with your sari or a geometric pallu, this label will give you all the appropriate cues for not shying away from the trends of the season. Helping you stand out at that blingy wedding, or giving you the ammo to make a style statement, Fuel should be your preferred choice. Nestled in the interiors of South Mumbai, any look from the collection will transform you into a new-fangled diva, quintessentially tailored to your requests.
Celebrating Icon
Most of us can confess to having a terrible coffee table habit. Not the kind involving currency and celebrity sherbet; rather the irresistible urge to seek out and purchase hefty tomes for said table, and surrounding shelves. In a few instances, these books are normally film related, and offer an initiation into the study and appreciation of fashion in movies. In fact, costumes play an important role in telling a cinematic story, and in their new book 100 Iconic Bollywood Costumes, fashion journalist Sujata Assomull and illustrator Aparna Ram celebrate fashion in Indian cinema. Studded with beautiful illustrations, the book also features a foreword by Manish Malhotra. Here's what they had to say.
GRAZIA: What prompted you to write a book on iconic Bollywood costumes? SUJATA ASSOMULL: When we started
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the project, we considered including red carpet looks as they've become so important in the last decade. But then we realised the book was losing focus. The red carpet does not have the long history that film does. That said, the influence of red carpet fashion has increased in the last few years, and it really deserves its own book. APARNA RAM: Early on in my watercolour and fashion illustration journey, I came across a book on 100 iconic dresses. I clearly remember thinking: Someone ought to do this for Bollywood. Very soon, my thought turned from 'someone ought to do this for Bollywood' to II ought to do this for Bollywood', and that is how the idea for the book was born.
G: Why do you think fashion has been so central to Bollywood films? SA: Bollywood is so democratic, and such an important part of India's social culture. It has been said that Bollywood and cricket are India's two greatest loves. AR: It's an inexplicable part of our cultural fabric that we worship movies stars and
cricket players in equal measure. In an age preceeding fashion magazines, blogs and YouTube, we looked to movies to tell us what was fashionable and what was not. And so, fashion and Bollywood has come to be closely linked over the years.
G: Your favourite look from the book? SA: That's a hard choice to make. But one that's personal to me is the purple sari that Madhuri Dixit wore in Hum Aapke Hain Koun because it was one of the first films I watched after moving to India. I thought Madhuri looked stunning in that sari. I even bought a version of it and wore it to a wedding once. AR: It's hard to choose. But if I had to pick one, I would have to go with Kareena Kapoor's T-shirt and white patiala bottoms from Jab We Met. I learnt that I could have fun with my heritage, that I could pair my favourite vintage Tee with Indian wear and still feel comfortable..
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