Across India, festivals are more than celebrations – they are a return. A return to roots, to memory, to rituals that stretch back across generations. And woven into every one of these moments is jewellery. Not just worn, but revered. Not just sparkle, but story.
At Appu G, we’re endlessly inspired by how jewellery transforms during festival season. It becomes language – a way to honour, to remember, to shine. And though every region celebrates differently, the emotion is always the same: joy wrapped in tradition.
In West Bengal, jewellery takes centre stage during Durga Puja. Shakha-pola bangles – red and white – are worn with deep pride by married women. Heavy gold necklaces glisten with sindoor and devotion. Every piece carries generations of belief.
In Gujarat, silver comes alive during Navratri. Layered necklaces, oxidised earrings, and mirror-work pendants dance with the body, echoing the rhythm of garba. Jewellery here is kinetic – it moves with music, it sings with celebration.
Down south, in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, the focus is on gold. Kasu malai – coin necklaces – are worn with white sarees during Onam and Pongal. Their beauty lies in symmetry, in craftsmanship, in legacy passed from mother to daughter.
In Kashmir, the dejhoor – an intricate gold ornament worn through the ear and tied into the hair – is more than an accessory. It’s a blessing. A symbol of protection, love, and marital strength. Passed down and rarely altered.
In Maharashtra, the nath becomes the heroine. A crescent-shaped nose ring, often embedded with pearls or rubies, worn proudly during Gudi Padwa and Ganesh Chaturthi – its curve carrying both elegance and power.
What binds all these expressions together is meaning.
Each state, each home, each woman carries her own jewellery ritual. Her own way of saying, “This is who I am. This is where I come from.”
At Appu G, we honour this spectrum. Our designs often draw from these very traditions – reimagined for today, but rooted in yesterday. Because festivals aren’t about costumes. They’re about connection.
And the jewellery you wear during them? It becomes part of the memory. Part of the photograph. Part of the feeling you carry with you – until the next year, and the one after that.