Sharvari channels corporatecore in tailored Antonio Marras power suit
Sharvari turned a beige tartan Antonio Marras suit into sharp corporatecore in Mumbai, pairing a sculpted blazer with flare-leg trousers and a crisp white shirt.

Sharvari wore Antonio Marras to the Bollywood Hungama Style Icons Awards 2026 in Mumbai on June 24, and the result was polished power dressing with real boardroom discipline. The suit, described across coverage as a beige tartan set from Antonio Marras’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection, paired a structured blazer with high-waist flare-leg trousers for an androgynous finish that still felt deliberately feminine.
The styling did the heavy lifting. One take on the look noted a crisp white shirt and a matching striped tie, while another described the ensemble as a modern corporatecore moment, exactly the kind of tailoring that updates old-school suiting without slipping into costume. The beige check kept the suit from feeling severe, but the sharp shoulder line and the long, sweeping trouser leg gave it the authority of menswear with the ease of contemporary evening dressing.
Price also sharpened the image. One report placed the jacket at about Rs. 1.78 lakh and the trousers at around Rs. 99,000, which positions the set firmly in luxury territory, where cut and cloth do most of the talking. The trousers mattered as much as the blazer: the flare shape lengthened Sharvari’s frame and softened the strictness of the jacket, a useful reminder for office dressing that volume on the bottom works best when the hem skims cleanly over the shoe rather than puddling at the ankle. A pointed heel or slim pump would keep that line crisp; a bulky platform would fight it.

That balance is what makes the look work for real workplaces. Strong shoulders can read intimidating unless they are offset by restrained layering, and Sharvari’s white shirt and narrow tie kept the suit grounded in classic tailoring language. It is the kind of outfit that translates well for meetings, presentations and events where you want to look assertive without looking dressed for the wrong decade.
The timing added another layer. Sharvari has been moving through a busy 2026 slate, with Main Vaapas Aaunga and Alpha among the projects linked to her next phase, and the latter has been described in some coverage as a female-led spy-universe film. At a moment when power dressing is shifting away from rigid corporate clichés, Sharvari’s Antonio Marras look lands exactly where the trend is headed, with confidence built into the tailoring itself.
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