Design

Mirari’s Mogra Collection Features Layered Seed Pearls and Colored Gemstones

Mirari translates the clustered mogra blossom into layered fresh seed pearls and a palette of Zambian and Colombian emeralds set in 18KT and 14KT yellow, white, and rose gold.

Priya Sharma2 min read
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Mirari’s Mogra Collection Features Layered Seed Pearls and Colored Gemstones
Source: www.indulgexpress.com

Mirari’s Mogra collection turns the clustered softness of the Indian mogra, or jasmine, into wearable jewellery through layered seed pearls and a deliberate palette of coloured gemstones. The brand’s site presents Mogra as “a harmonious blend of nature’s bejeweled bounty,” naming fresh seed pearls, Zambian and Colombian emeralds, natural diamonds in various cuts, Mozambique rubies, Ceylon blue sapphires, and rare Tanzanites as the collection’s core materials, all set in 18KT and 14KT gold in yellow, white, and rose hues.

The design intent emphasizes traditional ornament techniques translated for modern wear. Mirari describes the work as drawing from “traditional hair ornamentation,” observing “how mogra flowers are clustered, layered, and worn.” Designer Mira — cited in editorial coverage — explains, “To recreate this softness, we worked with seed pearls and precious beads arranged in multiple layers,” a technique the brand pairs with “fluid bead-setting rather than rigid forms.” Diamonds, the brand says, are “introduced sparingly, adding an ethereal sparkle that mirrors the flower’s gentle glow without overpowering its natural movement.”

Technically the collection is positioned as fine jewellery: Mirari’s site calls Mogra an “exclusive fine jewelry collection” and highlights meticulous production from “the first sketch to the final polish.” That language accompanies campaign branding; Mirari names the campaign “The Resilient Bloom” and uses visuals captioned “From Mirari Jewels’ Mogra collection” across promotional layouts. Social media posts use tags such as #MirariInternational, #FineJewelry, and #MograCollection, and a LinkedIn company post claims the pieces “blend the brand’s unique designs with the rare beauty of responsibly sourced gemstones.”

The sourcing claim appears in Mirari’s LinkedIn copy but the captured materials do not include certification details or chain-of-custody documentation. The brand’s assertion of “responsibly sourced gemstones” therefore stands as Mirari’s stated policy in its LinkedIn post, while public-facing product pages do not list third-party certifications, carat weights, retail prices, or SKU-level specifications for the Mogra pieces.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Mirari’s release of Mogra fits a broader pattern of heritage-inflected collections from the house; other brand work in the period includes a high-jewellery line called Mughalnama, which references carved gemstones, uncut diamonds, and intricate seed pearls and was presented in brand coverage dated November 15, 2025. Promotional captures for Mogra show social engagement on Mirari’s LinkedIn page — interface snippets indicate 195 followers and short congratulatory comments from named users — signaling early trade and peer interest.

For buyers and collectors, Mogra reads as a study in colour and layering: specific gem origins are cited, gold is specified at 18KT and 14KT, and the technique centers on seed-pearl bead layering rather than pavé or bezel-dominant approaches. Mirari has published campaign images and descriptive copy, but has not published pricing, carat or weight specifications, retail availability, or third-party sourcing documentation for the collection; those details remain to be released by the brand as Mogra moves into full market availability.

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