It started as a doodle in the margin of my work planner. Between meeting notes and to-do lists, I’d find myself drawing this flowing shape—long, elegant lines that felt both grand and grounded. My sister Ayesha’s wedding was months away, but the feeling was already there. I didn’t want to just wear something. I wanted to arrive in something. The standard, heavily-embroidered sherwani felt too stiff, too expected. I kept circling back to this fusion in my head: the majesty of a groom's sherwani, but with the dramatic sweep of a gown. A green sherwani gown with kurta pajama. Emerald green, to be exact. The colour of new leaves and old jewels. It was a wild idea. I mentioned it to my dad. He sipped his chai, silent for a long moment. Then he said, "If anyone can build a castle from a whisper, it's the people at Arshad Mens Wear."
Where Ideas Are Not Laughed At
I walked into their shop clutching my notebook, the pages frayed from being opened so much. I felt a bit silly, like a kid showing a drawing of a rocket ship. The place was a beautiful chaos of textures—towers of folded muslin, rainbows of thread spools. Mr. Arshad, a man with kind eyes behind his glasses, took the book from my hands. He didn't laugh. He studied my shaky lines. "A sherwani angarkha," he stated, not asked. He saw the gown in my scribble. He led me to the back, to a cabinet, and pulled out a bolt of fabric. He unrolled a foot of it across the cutting table. It wasn't just green. It was the green. Deep, saturated, with a quiet silk sheen that made it look alive. "This is the one," he said, and I knew he was right. My idea had just found its skin.
The Conversation of Creation
What happened next wasn't a transaction. It was a conversation. We sat at that table, the sea of green between us, and we talked about motion. "A gown is for moving," Mr. Arshad said, his hands painting shapes in the air. "So where does it flare? From the chest, to give you presence. Or from the waist, for a different drama?" We chose the chest. We talked about the opening—a sharp sherwani closure or a diagonal, wrapping angarkha cut. The diagonal won, for its sense of movement. For the kurta pajama underneath, he suggested raw silk in a pale almond colour. "It will breathe," he promised, "and it will make the green shout, but in a whisper." He was translating my feeling into geometry and grain.
The Poetry of the Details
A week later, we met for the embroidery. This is where Arshad Mens Wear truly sings. With such a bold colour and form, the decoration couldn't be loud. It had to be poetry. Mr. Arshad’s son, Farid, brought over a tray of threads. Not just gold and silver, but shades of copper and pale grey. We settled on a gota patti trim, thin bands of silver and grey, to outline the neck and the sweeping diagonal opening. "Like tracing the edge of a leaf with moonlight," Farid said. The buttons became tiny, hammered silver discs. On the cuffs of the almond kurta pajama, just a whisper of the same grey thread in a delicate chain pattern. It was all about a hint, a suggestion. They understood that true luxury often speaks softly.
The Basted-Together Dream
The first fitting is a humbling magic. The gorgeous green fabric was just basted together with white thread, a ghost of the final piece. I stepped into it, and Mr. Arshad’s head tailor, an older man named Saeed with pins in his mouth, walked around me. He didn't say much. He’d kneel, pinch a fold of fabric at my ankle, and murmur to his assistant in Punjabi. He’d lift my arm gently to check the shoulder. "We are building the house," Mr. Arshad translated, smiling. "Now we make sure the walls are straight for the decorations." I stood there, in the middle of the busy shop, feeling the cool fabric against my skin, seeing the shape of my wild idea hold me. It was the most vulnerable and powerful I’d ever felt getting dressed.
The Wedding Morning Feeling
On the morning of the wedding, I went for the final pick-up. The outfit was bagged in white muslin. When they unveiled it, my breath caught. The green was deeper. The silver trim wasn't flashy; it was like a secret just for the light to find. Dressing at home felt ceremonial. The almond kurta pajama was cool and soft. Then the gown. It settled on my shoulders with a weight that felt like history. It flowed. When I walked, it moved with me. At the wedding, the reaction was a quiet wave. Not gasps, but a series of slow, approving nods from the uncles. A cluster of my cousins went, "Ooof, Bhai!" My sister, Ayesha, touched the fabric and her eyes got a bit shiny. "You look like you," she said. And that was the greatest compliment. I didn't look like a model or a trend. I looked like my own best self.
Bring Them Your Whisper of an Idea
So, if you have a feeling, a colour in your heart, a sketch in a notebook that you’re too shy to show anyone—take it to Arshad Mens Wear. Don't go for what’s on the mannequin. Go for what’s in your mind. Tell them the story of your event, the feeling you want to carry. Whether it’s a majestic green sherwani gown with kurta pajama or something else entirely, they won’t see an odd request. They’ll see a possibility. They are builders of confidence, weavers of legacy, and masters of listening. They’ll take your whisper and turn it into a statement you’ll wear for a day and remember for a lifetime. Your story deserves its own fabric. Go tell it to them.