In the gilded corridors of Mughal courts, beauty was never incidental it was architecture. Every drape, every stitch, every hand-knotted embellishment was a declaration of civilisation at its most refined. Torani, the Delhi-born luxury house, carries that declaration forward, reinterpreting the grammar of Mughal fashion India cherishes into garments that feel as alive today as they were centuries past.
Founded with a devotion to handcrafted couture, Torani has built its identity on one steadfast belief: that true luxury Indian couture does not merely reference heritage it breathes it. Each collection is a love letter to a lost grandeur, lovingly restored.
“In Torani’s hands, the past is not preserved it is perfumed, draped, and worn into the present.”



The Collection
The Gul Bano Kurta Set opens the story with understated eloquence a silhouette sculpted for the woman who wears her history lightly. Its surface hums with delicate botanical embroidery, as if a Mughal miniature had been pressed into cloth.
The Farshi Lehenga is ceremonial splendour distilled. Floor-grazing, luminous, and heavy with artisanal intent, it is the kind of garment that commands a room into reverent silence. For the groom seeking equal grandeur, the Velvet Sherwani Collection answers with timeless authority rich velvet rendered in regal tones, embellished with thread that seems to carry light.
And then there is the Chanderi Dupatta Collection gossamer-weight Chanderi woven with the patience of an era that understood beauty as a long, slow art. Draped across the shoulder, it transforms any ensemble into something cinematic, something eternal.

The Torani collection is not simply designer ethnic wear it is an argument for the enduring poetry of Indian craft. In each embroidered edge and hand-finished hem, the brand asks a question that answers itself: what is luxury, if not the devotion of skilled hands working in full knowledge of beauty? This is the Torani promise that Mughal romance is not a relic, but a living, luminous language.

