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Jewel in your crown

  • Nishadil
  • January 14, 2024
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  • 4 minutes read
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Jewel in your crown

There’s a reason why Sabyasachi Mukherjee is known as the sort of disruptor who can set the tone for what a designer can and cannot do. He repackaged cultural nostalgia as the next big idea and celebrated Indian ness to rise to success. The list of Sabyasachi x… high profile collaborations include Christian Louboutin, Bergdorf Goodman, Pottery Barn and H&M.

He changed the way brides, grooms and their families too, dressed on their big day with unabashed vitality. Instead of primetime slots at fashion weeks, he engaged in a direct dialogue with his 5.6 million Instagram followers to showcase high jewellery and wedding ensembles. ADVERTISEMENT Now, the 49 year old has his ambitions set on consolidating his brand’s position in India’s $60 billion jewellery market.

Launched in 2017, Mukherjee expects the revenue from his jewellery line to reach Rs 150 crore in FY24. “The idea is to build a three billion dollar Sabyasachi Calcutta business by 2030. I am very systematic with planning, and I have immense patience,” says the designer, who sells India’s first branded mangalsutra (approx R1.5 2 lakh) as part of his fine jewellery line, with mang tikas, alligator and tiger cuffs and pendants.

For once, no one was looking at clothes. At an intimate salon style high jewellery presentation in New Delhi recently, Mukherjee indulged the jewellery equivalent of sensory overload to unpack a story of “modern royalty” through precious gemstone centric creations. To wit: The Minerva necklace featured an assembly of emeralds, rubies, tourmalines, morganites, surrounded in 18k gold and VVS VS diamonds.

He called it: “Sunday thrifting at Sudder Street, Calcutta...” An abstract expressionist approach to the 24 piece collection foraged through the gamut of colours, gem families, origins and influences; each piece telling a story of bold, proportioned design and time and labour intensive craftsmanship and had that hey look at me chutzpah that all but screamed modern heirlooms.

Mukherjee, to his advantage, understands that high design jewellery is at least as much about vanity as it is about art. “I create businesses by trying to understand where the society is moving,” says Mukherjee in a phone interview. Specifically, he is interested in exploring the schism between high and fashion jewellery.

“We are playful with stones; the styles are hyper versatile and democratic. They are more personality driven, and not designed to match your clothes but to find its own point of view.” The history of gemstone trading and jewellery making in India goes back more than five millennia. Golconda diamonds from Hyderabad, sapphires from Kashmir, and pearls from the Gulf of Mannar were coveted.

Jewellery embedded with precious stones was not only for the pleasure of adornment and sealed the social status of the wearer but also spoke of myths and legends. In the Mahabharata, Amrita (the immortality potion) consisted of water, herbal juice, liquid gold and dissolved gemstones. The 5th century Hindu text, the Ratnapariksha chronicles the symbolism of each birthstone to deities, planets, and days of the week.

“The coloured stones are an intrinsic part of the Indian psyche. Their talismanic properties also played a role in some form or other,” says Pramod Kumar KG, co founder of Eka Cultural Resources and Research, specialising in design archives, exhibitions and museums. Kumar recalls how two decades ago, when the owners of international jewellery houses known for their elegant diamond styles visited India, their wives went home purchasing coloured gemstones.

“We are a country of colour,” he adds. Sometime in the 1980s and 1990s, the demand for large, statement gemstones moved out to let the lighter, conservative designs take centre stage. Solitaires became the sparkling markers of significant celebrations and wealth, and self gifting diamonds served as a symbol of achievement and empowerment for women.

“In the past, a lot of people didn’t buy jewellery as an investment but to store unaccounted wealth, boosting the business of lab grown solitaires. As it required minimal design and making charges, it was an easier option if you wanted to liquidate and get almost all the money back. This greed to store wealth obliterated the [coloured stones] market, taking away the role of a paramparik karigar; it is their expertise that brings real value to jewellery,” believes Mukherjee.

“The secret to truly enjoying my jewellery is to turn it over. The back of the jewellery is intricately crafted with Bengal filigree work—a craft heritage—and studded with diamonds.” In an industry where pricing traditionally has been dictated by the cost of precious materials, Mukherjee holds the heritage of craftsmanship more valuable.

“What would become more rarefied than the rarest of stones is craftsmanship,” he asserts. According to a Bloomberg report in November 2023, LVMH forecasts a deficit of 22,000 workers by the end of 2025. There’s also the changing face of the jewellery buying customer. “In a selfie, the focus is on makeup and jewellery, not the clothes,” he quips.

The new confident, fashion conscious generation—which Mukherjee calls a “generation of startups”—is not shackled by the myth of jewellery as the once in a lifetime investment to be stored in a bank locker. “I want to create jewellery that fulfills both, desire for wearability and investment.

Jewellery like real estate appreciates no matter how many times you wear or inhabit it.”.