What if fashion could hold memory? Not just echo it—but embody it, wear it, live it?
In this episode, we speak to Vrinda Sachdev, co-founder of Qbik, and Tarini Manchanda, a creative voice who brings fashion into conversation with culture, sustainability, and visual identity. Together, we explore the idea of fashion as a palimpsest—a layered surface where past and present are stitched together in cloth.
We reflect on India’s rich textile heritage, where garments were once sacred storytellers—bearing regional identity, artisanal mastery, and deep cultural rituals. As modern fashion accelerates, we ask what has been lost in the process: have we traded textile consciousness for trend, and can we reclaim it without romanticising the past?
This conversation moves through the philosophy of slow fashion, where sustainability is not a buzzword but a return—to patience, process, and the intelligence of the hand. We talk about the agency of the kaarigar, and how true authorship in design must acknowledge those who shape it. We explore the new language of quiet luxury, where restraint speaks louder than excess, and detail becomes the new decadence.
What emerges is a portrait of fashion that is rooted, intentional, and alive with meaning. Fashion not just worn, but kept. Not consumed, but understood.