Behind every finished silhouette lies a quieter stage of craftsmanship — one that is rarely photographed, yet deeply felt in the final garment.
At Nayaab, the finishing table is where each piece slows down before it reaches its final form. Threads are checked individually, trims are aligned by hand, drapes are softened, and every silhouette is reviewed for balance, movement, and comfort.
This stage is not about redesigning the garment.
It is about refinement.
Inside the atelier, the finishing process becomes a rhythm of small but important decisions:
-
adjusting the fall of a dupatta,
-
refining the edge of a drape,
-
securing delicate embellishments,
-
balancing embroidery weight,
-
and ensuring the garment moves naturally when worn.
Each piece passes through multiple layers of inspection before dispatch.
Not only for construction quality, but for how the garment feels in motion.
In heavily detailed occasionwear, even the smallest finishing adjustment can completely change the elegance of a silhouette. A softened seam, a corrected pleat, or a balanced trim placement can transform how the fabric settles against the body.
This process is especially important for:
-
draped sarees,
-
occasionwear,
-
sharara silhouettes,
-
embroidered co-ords,
-
and handcrafted festive edits where movement and softness matter as much as embellishment itself.
The finishing table is also where craftsmanship becomes personal.
Sketches, trims, threads, fabric swatches, handwritten notes, and embroidery references often exist side by side — creating a workspace that feels both technical and deeply artistic.
Every garment carries traces of these invisible details:
-
the hand that corrected the drape,
-
the artisan who aligned the threadwork,
-
the final steam and press that softened the silhouette before dispatch.
In many ways, the finishing stage defines the emotional quality of the garment.
Because luxury is rarely only about ornamentation.
It is about care, balance, and intention.
At Nayaab, the finishing table is where every piece is given the final pause before it leaves the atelier — refined carefully, reviewed quietly, and prepared to become part of someone’s story.