Where Rajasthani Royal Traditions Meet Mehr Zari Elegance
For over three decades, Mehr Zari has been the premier guardian of handwoven Kanjivaram zari, Banarasi brocade, and Rajasthani Poshak artistry—curating timeless luxury for the modern connoisseur.
Born in the Royal Courts of Jodhpur, Refined for the Modern World
In 1994, amidst the majestic blue alleys of Jodhpur and the historic palaces of Rajasthan, our founders began a mission: to preserve the sacred art of handloom zari weaving before modern industrial machines could erase centuries of artisan mastery.
By partnering directly with over 1,200 hereditary weaving families across Varanasi, Kanchipuram, and Jaipur, Mehr Zari established a bridge between age-old royal court specifications and contemporary global fashion. Every saree we weave takes between 15 to 45 days of painstaking manual precision on traditional pit looms.
The Standards That Define Royal Luxury
Handwoven Authenticity
We reject synthetic power-looms. Every thread of pure mulberry silk and golden zari is manually spun and woven by hereditary master craftsmen.
Ethical Artisan Support
By cutting out exploitative middlemen, we guarantee fair living wages, healthcare stipends, and loom modernization grants to over 1,200 weaving families.
Sustainable Silk Heritage
Our ahimsa peace-silk initiatives and organic vegetable-dye processes ensure that environmental harmony is preserved alongside royal aesthetics.
Lifetime Purity Guarantee
Every saree comes accompanied by an authentic Silk Mark Certificate and a lifetime restoration promise from our Jodhpur flagship atelier.
Meet the Masters Behind the Weave
Our creations are born from the collaboration between traditional hereditary craftsmen and modern textile historians.
Maharaj K. Rathore
Hailing from Varanasi, K. Rathore oversees our Kadwa brocade pit looms, ensuring 24K gold zari purity in every bridal drape.
Priya Mehr Zari Singh
A graduate of Paris Institute of Fashion, Priya curates traditional Rajasthani silhouettes with modern color palettes and lightweight draping techniques.
Vikramaditya Chauhan
Vikram travels across royal museum collections in Rajasthan to revive forgotten 18th-century Rajputi Poshak motifs and weave designs.