From Banaras to Bangalore: The Untold Story Woven Into Turaja



The Secret in the Silk

There’s a photograph I keep in my wallet, faded, creased at the edges, yet priceless. It shows a young man standing before massive wooden looms, his hands resting on silk that catches the light like liquid gold. That man was my great-grandfather. And in his hands lay the beginning of a secret, one that would travel across a century and two cities before revealing itself.

The Boy Who Couldn't Stay Away

In the late 1800s, in a house tucked deep within Banaras’s labyrinthine streets, something magical was happening.

My great-grandfather would often slip away from his college to our family’s modest silk factory. The elders disapproved. “Focus on your studies,” they’d warn. “What future is there in watching threads dance?” But he couldn’t stay away.

He’d stand transfixed as weavers’ hands moved with the precision of surgeons and the grace of dancers. When it came time to dye the saree, they’d call him over. “Choose,” they’d say. He would select the deep greens, the passionate reds, and royal blues paired with shocking pinks all of which worked amazingly.

These weren’t just colours, they were prayers woven into cloth. Heavy Banarasi brocades shimmered in the dim light, each thread weighted with devotion and artistry.

The World Started Changing

Decades passed like the shuttle across a loom: swift, purposeful, inevitable.

Outside those factory walls, the world transformed. Electric bulbs replaced oil lamps, and fashion began chasing speed instead of story. But inside, the looms sang the same ancient song.

My grandfather grew up wrapped in that rhythm. As he came of age, he faced an impossible question: should tradition be preserved, or could it evolve while staying true to itself?

The elders warned, “Change the thread, and you change everything.”

Then, one monsoon morning, clarity struck. Banaras wasn’t just a place, it was a spirit that lived in the silk itself. If that spirit stayed intact, perhaps the form could shift.

So he began to experiment: lighter fabrics that draped like water, contemporary patterns that honoured traditional geometry, and subtle hues that whispered instead of shouted. The older weavers watched, skeptical at first. Then something shifted. They saw their craft not dying but dancing into a new era.

The Bridge Between Two Cities

The move to Bangalore wasn’t planned; it drew him like silk from a cocoon.

The city buzzed with chaos and creativity, a place where tradition collided with technology and a thousand stories competed for attention. But Bangalore offered something Banaras couldn’t: new eyes. Designers who saw potential where others saw just fabric.

A small office was opened. Word spread through whispers: “Have you felt their silk? It’s different. It remembers something.”

Each piece created in Bangalore still carried the DNA of Banaras, the ghats at sunrise, and the Ganges reflecting light like liquid memory. But they also held something new: the confidence of the modern woman, unafraid to blend centuries in a single drape.

The Question That Changed Everything

Then came my turn.

I grew up between two worlds: summers in Banaras watching weavers whose hands remembered patterns their minds had forgotten, and school years in Bangalore, where my friends couldn’t tell silk from polyester.

It bothered me more than I admitted.

One night, surrounded by sarees in our Bangalore office, I asked my father, “What’s the point? In a world of fast fashion, who cares about the story in the silk?”

He didn’t answer right away. Instead, he pulled out that old photograph, the one I now carry, and told me something I’d never heard before.

“Your great-grandfather made me promise something before he died,” he said. “That one day, someone from our family would take these threads beyond India’s borders. That our silk would find women who’d never seen the Ganges but would feel something true when they touched our fabric.”

He paused. “He said that person would understand we’re not selling sarees. We’re offering…”
 He looked at me and smiled. “Well, that’s for you to figure out.”

The Birth of Turaja

I spent months wrestling with that conversation. What were we offering?

One evening, as the sunset painted Bangalore’s sky in impossible colours, I understood.

We were offering belonging, a way for women to carry their heritage without being burdened by it. To feel elegant in everyday moments, not just at weddings. To drape themselves in something that honoured where they came from while celebrating who they were becoming.

But we needed a name that captured all of this. After hundreds of attempts, one word emerged: Turaja.

We launched with three collections:
 
Resham – chiffon that flows like poetry, perfect for moments demanding grace and movement.
 
Saral – understated satin luxury for women who know true elegance never shouts.
 
Timeless Drapes – pure crepe silk, refined and endlessly versatile.

Each collection speaks its own language, yet they’re united by one promise: authenticity.

The Secret Revealed

So what was the secret my great-grandfather understood all those years ago, standing in that small Banaras factory?

It’s this: true craft isn’t about preserving the past; it’s about loving something so deeply that you give it permission to grow.

He knew the world would speed up, that people would forget what it feels like to wear something made with devotion instead of deadlines. But he also knew that quality leaves an imprint, that women who touch real silk would remember, and would want their daughters to remember too.

And perhaps that’s why Bangalore, known to most as the Silicon City, became our home. Because we knew it differently. To us, it was always the Silk City, where technology meets tradition, where innovation honours inheritance, and where the future is woven with threads from the past.

This is more than fashion and fabric.

It’s a conversation across generations, the courage to honour your roots while reaching for new skies.

Every saree we create carries a question:
 
what will you weave into your legacy?

TURAJA | Premium Crepe Silk Sarees
  Where Heritage Lives, Where Your Story Continues.

 

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