Design

Mirari Jewels’ Mogra Collection Debuts Minimalist, Bloom-Inspired Designs by Mira Gulati

Mirari’s Mogra collection translates the mogra blossom into layered seed-pearl work and sparing diamonds, with Mira Gulati naming the jasmine as the series’ guiding motif.

Rachel Levy2 min read
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Mirari Jewels’ Mogra Collection Debuts Minimalist, Bloom-Inspired Designs by Mira Gulati
Source: www.indulgexpress.com

Mirari Jewels has introduced the Mogra collection, a study in restrained floral luxury by founder and principal designer Mira Gulati. “The mogra flower became the heart of the collection, influencing every detail with its grace,” Gulati said, and the designs translate that botanical core into layered seed-pearl textures and softly unfolding forms that prioritize movement over monumentality.

The palette reads like a garden at dusk. Mirari’s copy lists fresh seed pearls, Colombian and Zambian emeralds, Mozambique rubies, Ceylon blue sapphires, rare Tanzanites, natural diamonds in various cuts and pink sapphires among the principal stones, set across 18KT and 14KT gold in yellow, white and rose hues. ArtofJewellery highlights the Mogra Empress Cocktail Ring as a technical exemplar: set in 18KT yellow gold and “adorned with a dazzling mix of round and pear brilliant-cut diamonds, lustrous pearl beads, and vibrant pink sapphires,” the ring demonstrates how high-polish goldwork and mixed-cut brilliants can coexist with delicate pearl bead clusters.

Craftsmanship in Mogra leans on a vocabulary borrowed from traditional hair ornamentation and floral accretion. Gulati described the making as an exercise in softness: “To recreate this softness, we worked with seed pearls and precious beads arranged in multiple layers.” That layered bead-setting is paired elsewhere in the collection with more conventional stone-holding techniques; an original account of the line notes “delicate bezel work,” while coverage also emphasizes that “diamonds are introduced sparingly, adding an ethereal sparkle that mirrors the flower’s gentle glow without overpowering its natural movement.” The result is a choreography of bezel-set gems and bead clusters that privilege subtle shimmer and tactile depth over overt flash.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Stylistically the collection positions itself at the intersection of heritage and contemporary restraint. Mirari describes the Mogra pieces as heirloom-leaning yet refined, intended to be “worn across the globe at any hour of the day or night” and to evoke “a delicately coordinated symphony of color, light, and grace.” ArtofJewellery places specific pieces such as the Opulent Mughal Grace Necklace and Earrings within ceremonial and festive wardrobes, calling their motifs “regal” and suitable for weddings and evening celebrations.

Public-facing visibility for Mogra includes a Mirari Instagram post on Dec 13, 2025 that stated, “Featured in Hello! Magazine, the Mogra Collection embodies refined Indian luxury” and registered 15 likes and 0 comments, and an industry summary published Feb 25, 2026. Mirari’s promotional materials do not include pricing, carat weights, stockists or production provenance; those commercial and technical details remain to be provided by the house. For now, Mogra reads as Mira Gulati’s compact manifesto: jasmine-scented in spirit, exacting in execution, and calibrated for discreet, generational wear.

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