Your search for: love aaj kal

Of Promotions


Sara attended promotions for Love Aaj Kal wearing prints, first in a polka dot Dhruv Kapoor jacket and skirt and then in a tee and zebra print skirt. Have a favorite between the two.



Sara Ali Khan at Love Aaj Kal 2 Promotions

Photo Credit: Viral Bhayani

  • Leave a comment

    Comment image 8

  • Like it? Share it!

Style File


Recent round of promotions had Sara giving us a range of looks, though not quite convinced she has aced her non-Indianwear appearances yet… The oversized shirt and sequin skirt just looked dated and the strapless dress somewhat ill-fitting. The look in the suit is right in her comfort zone and one that she wears with ease but if I had to pick a sighting that stood out to me among these, it’d be the appearance in white top, denim shorts, pink pumps and a top knot. The look itself isn’t the most novel but Sara sure looked nice.



Sara Ali Khan



Sara Ali Khan

Photo Credit: Viral Bhayani

  • Leave a comment

    Comment image 16

  • Like it? Share it!

In Tamanna Punjabi Kapoor


While on the sets of a television show to promote her latest movie, Sara was photographed in a Tamanna Punjabi Kapoor sharara. Wearing her hair partly pinned back, she rounded out the look with matching earrings. Like the look on her?



Sara Ali Khan On Indian Idol Sets



Sara Ali Khan On Indian Idol Sets

Photo Credit: Viral Bhayani

  • Leave a comment

    Comment image 26

  • Like it? Share it!

A Separate(s) Story


Teaming her Pony Stone crop-top with a neon skirt from Nasty Gal, Sara attended the trailer launch of her latest movie. With her hair pulled back in to a ponytail, she rounded out the look with a pair pf matching sandals from Aldo. Are you feeling this look? Can’t say I am.



Sara Ali Khan At Love Aaj Kal 2 Trailer Launch

Photo Credit: Viral Bhayani

  • Leave a comment

    Comment image 13

  • Like it? Share it!

Star Speak, By Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari: Thinking Out Aloud


Star Speak is an ongoing series of columns, penned by celebrities we are used to seeing on these pages. This is their space to write about their take on fashion, the fraternity and whatever else catches their fancy.

This week’s column comes from Ashwiny Iyer TiwarI who after over a decade long career in advertising, quit her job with Leo Burnett to pursue film-making. Ms. Tiwari is best known perhaps for the movie, ‘Nil Battey Sannata’. Follow the filmmaker on Twitter here and on Instagram here.

Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari

——————————————————————————————————————–
Thinking Out Aloud

I remember my first frock. A floral one with frills made by my aunt. It took her hardly a week to make this beautiful piece of art. I would call it ‘art’ since anyone who can make something with hand is an artist! As I track all my childhood clothes, I realize it’s mostly made by my mother, aunt or grandmother. There were weekly discussions on what new designs they could learn and what they would try next on me and my cousin. The discarded second-hand magazines like Femina, Savvy which were considered “fashion” and women know-how were saved to make patterns. (The magazines even came with extra supplements during the festive season on ‘how to’ stitch a blouse with a V-neck or a salwar kameez which has kali in it.) They were their own designers and our designers too.

We did not have a point of view even when we were teenagers. Everything they made for us was with love, and we looked our best as we walked wearing a smile on our powdered faces and plaited hair that swayed in step. We were happy. Our mothers were really happy!

No one judged what they wore or what colours suited their shades and tints of skin. No fancy haircuts. No hair colour. No skin treatments or overhauling of the body that needed a reassurance that they needed to look better. The blouses they stitched for themselves (they still do) had a lot of what they felt their personality needed to be. My mother loved puff sleeves. Even today she wears them, her sari a little high. But no one said this is not the way a sari should be worn or her blouse is too tacky! They all wore clothes which suited them. Emphasized their creation and made sure it added to their personality. As I looked through some old photographs of my mother and aunt I saw so much of warmth in an eyes filled with kajal from that green dabba. A faint lipstick or may be just balm or ghee! A glowing skin just like a ray of sunlight passing through the face that cannot match any HD makeup.

No pretense. Just who you are is what you saw! 

Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari

(more…)

  • Leave a comment

    Comment image 15

  • Like it? Share it!