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Rohit Bal's Last Hurrah!

By REDIFF STYLE
November 02, 2024

Nineteen days before he passed into the ages, Designer Rohit Bal presented his last show at the Lakme Fashion Week x FDCI in Delhi on October 13.

It was an amazing celebration of Indian aesthetics and craftsmanship.

The 17th century Quli Khan's tomb in Mehrauli shone with lights and resonated with Shubha Mudgal's powerful voice as model after beautiful model walked the ramp in his exquisite creations, with the lovely Ananya Panday taking the final bow.

His carefully curated ensembles were poetry in motion, symbolic of timeless luxury and the beauty of nature.

And, of course, if it was a Rohit Bal show, it had to be hatke.

He brought back the gorgeous Sheetal Mallar on the ramp.

He danced a jig that thumbed a nose at his recent cardiac ailments.

The show was joy, effervescence and beauty and no one knew Bal's luxurious ode to the rose in the grand finale would be his last-ever show.

The designer, who was just 63, had played a pivotal role in changing India's fashion landscape and will be sorely missed.

IMAGE: The stunning designer with his stunning muse.
All photographs, video: Kind courtesy Lakme Fashion Week/Instagram

 

IMAGE: Ananya's black velvet lehenga was magnificently embellished with red roses, does, fawns and gold embroidery reminiscent of the baroque era.

 

IMAGE: A closer look at the stunning detailing.

 

IMAGE: Rohit Bal, who did a little jig for the audience, was joined by Ananya, his friend Lalit Tehlan, and model Arya Bhat.

Watch Gudda as he got the audience to smile.

 

 

IMAGE: Supermodel Sheetal Mallar with Lalit Tehlan.

 

IMAGE: Sartorial storytelling at its best, this was an incredible use of Indian embroidery using animal and flower motifs.

 

IMAGE: Rohit gave us a dose of maximalism -- printed parakeets, dramatic cape and pill box-hat.

 

IMAGE: A heady cocktail of tropical prints, sumptuous fabrics and button deets.

 

 

IMAGE: The design maestro proved that monochrome can be playful too.

 

IMAGE: The fact that he used red velvet for menswear was so delish.

 

REDIFF STYLE

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