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Jaipur bride wears 100-year-old maatha patti, groom-designed jewellery

A Jaipur bride paired a 100-year-old maatha patti with jewellery designed by her groom, turning her wedding look into a family heirloom story.

Rachel Levy··2 min read
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Jaipur bride wears 100-year-old maatha patti, groom-designed jewellery
Source: vogue.in
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A 100-year-old maatha patti can do what few bridal jewels can: anchor a look in history while making it feel strikingly current. In Jaipur, that antique forehead ornament sat at the center of a wedding look shaped not just by one bride’s taste, but by a shared act of design, with jewellery created by the groom adding a second layer of intimacy and intent.

The combination is telling. A maatha patti already carries deep bridal symbolism in Indian wedding dress, framing the face with a line of ornament that reads as both adornment and inheritance. Here, the age of the piece mattered as much as its beauty. A century-old headpiece does not simply accessorize a bride; it brings memory to the forehead, turning the wedding ensemble into a visible link between generations. Set against new jewellery designed by the groom, the effect was less matching set than meaningful dialogue.

That balance between heirloom and newly commissioned work is exactly where modern bridal jewelry feels most compelling. The bride’s antique maatha patti supplied texture, sentiment and provenance, while the groom’s contribution shifted the look from styling to authorship. Instead of treating jewellery as a completed purchase, the wedding made it part of the ceremony itself, a joint creation that folded one partner’s personal touch into the other’s family history.

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Photo by Gaurav Vishwakarma

The design language also fits a broader return to heritage-inspired bridal ornaments. Kundan and polki mathapattis are trending again, and that revival makes sense: these pieces bring architecture, glow and old-world detail to a ceremony without feeling overworked. In a Jaipur setting, the appeal is even stronger. The city’s long association with fine craft gives antique and bespoke jewellery a natural home, especially when the bride chooses a piece with age and the groom contributes something newly made.

The feature, dated May 3, 2026, did not identify the couple, the jeweller or the venue, but the styling itself was enough to make the point. The most memorable bridal looks are increasingly built around personal narrative, not excess. A 100-year-old maatha patti and groom-designed jewellery are a sharp reminder that the most persuasive wedding jewels are the ones that carry a story as carefully as they carry stones.

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