Snapinst.app_482629854_18489644770044025_3220696767797111486_n_1080.jpg

Oscars 2025: All the Indian designers seen on celebrities, from Mindy Kaling to Blackpink’s Lisa

Beyond the glass beads and naked dresses seen on the Oscars 2025 red-carpet, Indian designers had their moment under the sun too. From Blackpink’s Lisa in custom Rahul Mishra for her performance to Karan Johar in a Gaurav Gupta blazer set—Indian artistry took centre stage. Ahead, we curate a list of all the Indian Designers seen during Oscars 2025 week.

Lisa in Rahul Mishra

Instagram content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Singer, actor, and model Lisa made history as the first K-Pop artist to perform at Oscars 2025. For this moment, she chose to take centre stage in Rahul Mishra couture. She wore the ‘Gaian Genesis’ black tonal velvet dress, with black embroidery and a slit on one side, from the designer’s Spring Couture 2025 collection, ‘The Pale Blue Dot’.

Mindy Kaling in Rahul Mishra

Instagram content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.




Source link

Snapinst.app_482427449_18487946320018556_6262063686142458718_n_1080.jpg

Last night, Natasha Poonawalla stepped out in a 1983 Karl Lagerfeld Haute Couture look

“I’ve been a collector for many years,” said Natasha Poonawalla in Vogue India’s cover story from December 2021. When not working or parenting, Natasha Poonawalla still takes refuge in fashion. And, her recent look is proof. Last night in Los Angeles, the philanthropist and fashion enthusiast wore a look from Karl Lagerfeld‘s Haute Couture, Autumn-Winter 1983-84 collection for the annual Chanel and Charles Finch dinner.

This evening ensemble takes us back to Lagerfeld’s first collection in 1983. The outfit features work by Lesage, an off-the-shoulder black and gold sequined jacket embellished with gold metal thread and sable fur, and is complemented by a black silk faille full skirt. The jacket also boasts a three-dimensional sun-face design at the rear neck.

Image may contain Blouse Clothing Pattern Accessories Bag and Handbag
Image may contain Accessories Bag Handbag Body Part Finger Hand Person Adult and Purse

Source link

KVR_0211.jpg

Your skincare doesn’t need to be trendy. Instead, unglamorous staples can go a long way

Everyone has a wind-down ritual: habits or routines that help them transition out of the chaos of the day. For me, Friday evenings were centred around a seven-step skincare routine to decompress after a demanding workweek. On one such day, I was especially eager for step two: exfoliation. Surely, that new Korean AHA-BHA toner would banish the stubborn breakout dotting my left cheek, an unwelcome precursor to my period. So I cleansed my face, soaked a cotton pad with the solution and pressed it firmly against the offending area for a full minute—in hindsight, a step I should have approached with more caution. The result? A chemical burn that left me with a hard brown scab the size of a fifty-paisa coin for an entire week.

Humbled, I turned to the bottom shelf of my dresser for help. It is the unassuming home of my no-nonsense skincare staples that have served me reliably for years. Out came the Cetaphil cleansing lotion and Soframycin, a dependable duo that promises healing and comfort. Neither of them has the sleek packaging of their trendier counterparts, but they offer exactly what my inflamed skin needed: gentleness and consistency. Incidents like these are reminders of the value of ‘tried and tested products, the original stalwarts of skincare that consistently deliver without drama. While the thrill of innovation is hard to resist, there’s an unquestionable reassurance in the reliability of the already proven and familiar.

If you look up the term evolution, one definition calls it the gradual development of something. The concept holds for almost everything—how we think, what we wear, what we eat or the things that capture our fancy. My interest has always been piqued by evolution in the world of beauty. A salicylic acid under-eye roller? Sign me up. A red-light mask that combats inflammation? Irresistible. An aromatherapy body scrub that guarantees baby-soft skin? Just take my money already. But if my experiences have taught me anything, it’s that experimenting too much can be a double-edged sword. Do too much, and you risk undoing the very results you hoped to achieve. The beauty industry is a playground of constant innovation, churning out skincare, makeup and hybrids that promise to solve every woe. And thanks to social media, many of these products go viral overnight—some for their eye-catching packaging, others for their promising formulas. But not everything is worth the hype.


Source link

MG_9994_2.jpg

Who’s third wheeling the couple at Indian weddings? Talismans and traditions that ward off nazar

If there is one tradition that is an inextricable part of the Indian wedding machinery, it’s the meticulous art of warding off nazar. This full-fledged operation has everyone from pandits and Pinky Maasi to your first-grade teacher moonlighting as security guards against the evil eye.

In this realm of DIY spiritual defence, even a stray compliment can be interpreted as an act of aggression. Just a week before my wedding, the designer who was creating my outfit innocently posted a sneak peek of my bridal ensemble on Instagram. The DMs came flooding in: “Make her take it down immediately!” Cue panic. By the time of my next fitting, the dress had to be let out. Whether the culprit was the evil eye or PMS bloat remains a mystery to this day. But I’ll tell you this: nothing humbles a bride faster than realising that the universe has teamed up with her waistline to make a point.

It would seem that envy fuels this cosmic mischief, and nothing attracts envy like things going well. Weddings, of course, are evil-eye magnets—grand spectacles of joy practically begging for the poisoned arrow of nazar to hit them. That’s why our ancestors (and their cousins and neighbours) devised strategies as elaborate as the weddings themselves to keep the thing at bay. After all, before any auspicious occasion, there is a lot of energy coming your way, positive or suspect. And if carrying out simple rituals can give you a little peace of mind, then why not? If you could devise a first line of defence against ill will, why wouldn’t you?

Of course, everyone’s talismans take different shapes. The Greeks have blue beads. In the Middle East, it’s the hamsa. Italy has the cornicello. Egypt flashes the eye of Horus to ill-wishers. Indians sport the black dot or nazar battu. Turkey and the tiny tattoo on my right arm both have the ever- ever-so-ubiquitous evil eye. And let me tell you, the haters don’t stand a chance.

From fiery nimboo-mirchi garlands to the occasional smudge of soot on your cheek, nazar rituals are a mix of ancient wisdom and everyday absurdity. But just how absurd are we talking? “My grandmother made me carry a lemon for 15 days, starting from the day I got engaged, all the way until the final day. That poor lemon went with me everywhere—inside my purse, my laptop bag, my tote when I went to the mall, even tucked into my pocket during my evening walks,” Nikita Desai, 34, a Gujarati bride from Mumbai, recounts. Manisha Rai, 29, a Bengali bride, reminisces: “I remember a ritual from my haldi where I was given a small yellow coin pouch filled with mustard seeds and salt and told to keep it with me until the wedding day. I was also prohibited from going out or being in public.”The condition was put on her by her grandmother and designed to keep unwanted gazes away.


Source link

loreal-iconic-browns.png

Loreal Iconic Browns


Loreal Iconic Browns


Source link

Oscars202025.jpeg

All the moments you might have missed from the Oscars 2025

The last two months have given us an Oscar season like no other—so, it’s only right that the Oscars 2025 match that (frankly extreme) level of drama. Going into Hollywood’s biggest night of the year, tensions and anxieties seemed to be at an all-time high: what would become of the acting and Best Picture races which still felt too close to call? How would producers balance the need for a fast-paced, entertaining ceremony with honouring those who were on the frontlines of the devastating LA wildfires and striking an appropriately sombre note, too? And how on earth would the show deal with the presence of Emilia Pérez’s Karla Sofía Gascón, whose Best Actress campaign imploded in the midst of a shocking scandal, but who will now be returning to the spotlight after a strategic pause?

From the viral red-carpet outings and showstopping musical performances to the most emotional speeches and jaw-dropping twists, these are all the moments you might have missed from the Oscars 2025.

Sequins reigned supreme

Image may contain Ariana Grande Fashion Clothing Dress Formal Wear Gown Wedding Wedding Gown and Evening Dress

JC Olivera/Getty Images

Image may contain Lupita Nyong'o Clothing Dress Fashion Formal Wear Gown Wedding Wedding Gown Adult and Person

Frazer Harrison

Image may contain Emma Stone Clothing Dress Evening Dress Formal Wear Adult Person Wedding Head and Face

Mike Coppola/Getty Images

Image may contain Selena Gomez Clothing Dress Evening Dress Formal Wear Accessories Jewelry Necklace and Adult

Savion Washington/Getty Images

From the more subtle embellishments on Ariana Grande’s Glinda-inspired tulle (not to mention her body glitter) and Zoe Saldaña’s strapless Saint Laurent, to Rachel Sennott’s all-out, Barbie-pink ball gown, Lupita Nyong’o in pearl-encrusted white, Selena Gomez and Emma Stone dripping with crystals, Joe Locke’s embellished waistcoat, Cynthia Erivo’s incredible nails, Coralie Fargeat’s shimmering black frock, Mindy Kaling’s silver floor-skimmer, Halle Berry in a mirrored work of art and Wicked star Marissa Bode’s red-hot number, A-listers dazzled on the step and repeat.

X content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Women over 50 didn’t hold back

Image may contain Fernanda Torres Fashion Adult Person Formal Wear Clothing Dress Performer and Solo Performance

Christina House/Getty Images

Image may contain Whoopi Goldberg Fashion Clothing Dress Formal Wear Gown Accessories Jewelry Necklace and Glasses

Christina House/Getty Images

Image may contain Demi Moore Fashion Clothing Dress Formal Wear Adult Person Premiere Red Carpet and Evening Dress

Frazer Harrison

Image may contain Goldie Hawn Clothing Dress Evening Dress Formal Wear Accessories Jewelry Necklace and Fashion

Mike Coppola/Getty Images

Fernanda Torres shimmied in her feathered showstopper, Whoopi Goldberg showed up in retina-searing electric blue, 79-year-old Goldie Hawn wore gold and Demi Moore shut down the red carpet in a silver, sculpted stunner. While many younger starlets (Elle Fanning, Blackpink’s Lisa, Margaret Qualley et al) underplayed it with more classic looks, their more experienced colleagues, thankfully, did the opposite.




Source link

GettyImages-2202909640.jpg

Oscars 2025: What did Selena Gomez, Ariana Grande and more stars wear

Tonight, the 2025 Oscars red carpet concluded an eventful awards season filled with stellar celebrity sightings—and even more splendid fashions. While the lead-up to tonight’s Oscars has seen plenty of glamorous red carpets—including at the Golden Globes, BAFTAs, and SAG Awards—theAcademy Awards always serve as the grand finale. A-listers save their best suits and gowns for last, ensuring that the Oscars step and repeat is one to remember. The best dressed stars tonight? The presenters and nominees who met the moment by fusing traditional evening attire with a sense of fun and unexpected risk-taking—an opportune reminder that fashion is here to delight, entertain, and even polarize us.

Many stars opted for loads of shimmer and crystals. Take Selena Gomez and her bejeweled Ralph Lauren column dress, or Demi Moore in a plunging Armani Privé gown. Strong shapes had a trending moment as well, as seen on Raffey Cassidy in her big-bowed silk Loewe dress. Statement hues also took over the red carpet. See: Michelle Yeoh in a cobalt blue Balenciaga strapless number, Coco Gauff in a cascading yellow Miu Miu dress, and Raye in a draped Vivienne Westwood corseted gown. It made for a colorful carpet that felt upbeat and celebratory.

As for some of the best dressed men of the night, A Complete Unknown star Timothée Chalamet stood out from the pack in his butter yellow leather Givenchy suit, while Sing Sing star Colman Domingo opted for red in a Valentino shawl suit. It was refreshing to see men rebuke tradition and experiment with flair; more of that, please.

Below, explore Vogue’s best dressed stars from the 2025 Oscars.

This article first appeared on vogue.com


Source link

AYUS8381.jpg

This Hyderabadi wedding in Rajasthan was made special by a son from the bride’s previous marriage

Where do we find love? On dating apps, where most conversations fizzle out, and even ChatGPT seems clearer about its intentions than some humans? Or on matrimonial websites, where caste and purity dictate the rules, leaving little room for nuance or stepping beyond society’s sanctioned limits?

Chitralekha Pasupuleti and Holm-Ingolf Hamann, born worlds apart, met in Seattle through a dating app—at an Indian restaurant called Moksha, now replaced by another.

“She had a puffy jacket on because it was November,” says Ingolf Hamann. “I hugged her and she was this fluffy cloud of puffiness. I didn’t even know the human was in here. It was so darling. She is a petite person and the puffy jacket made her look much bigger.”

When he hugged Pasupuleti, walking towards her all blue-eyed, in a straight woolen jacket, hair almost tousled, for her, the “hug felt as if he knew me, didn’t feel uncomfortable at all but very caring and loving.”

In the first meeting, both of them weren’t there to impress the other. They had been in enough relationships to know that the whole impression business only lasts so long and that it takes more than just grand illusions to see a relationship through.

“I also liked her independence,” he says. “I was raised with the idea that men and women should be independent, self-sufficient, and no one has to rely on the other. But it is comforting to know that you can do that when tough times come. So, there was no red flag. I was wondering, what am I missing? Is the shoe dropping somewhere? Where is the skeleton in the closet? I didn’t know. And it turned out there wasn’t any.”

They fell in love quickly—between grocery lines and Crate & Barrel aisles in Washington before heading to an Indian restaurant. Things became clear when Ingolf Hamann, newly a US citizen, planned to celebrate in Paris during winter. They had never been professionally photographed together, and Paris in winter felt perfect. Braving subzero temperatures, they woke early for a photographer’s only available slot.

“He was very nervous and I was like, why is he this, you know, stressed out about a photo shoot? It’s just a photo shoot,” she says. “I wondered if maybe we should not have done this. Then the photographer said why don’t you two just talk to each other. So we both did and (Ingolf Hamann) would just not stop talking. And I was thinking, oh my God, the photos are going to come out really terrible because he is talking. Suddenly, I started hearing words like marriage, love and life and I realized, oh, this is a proposal speech. He went down on one knee and people around were clapping and I was just very emotional, he said how having me in his life was like Diwali, tears were streaming down my face.”


Source link

GettyImages-1503235032.jpg

4 mental health apps that make seeking help easier

Disclaimer: These apps are not substitutes for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are in crisis or need urgent help, please reach out to a mental health professional or a helpline in your area.

Mental health conversations have come a long way, but seeking support can still feel overwhelming. Stigma, accessibility, and affordability often act as roadblocks, leaving many to navigate their struggles alone. While professional help is invaluable, not everyone has immediate access to a therapist or a support system. This is where mental health platforms step in, offering a bridge between awareness and action, whether through guided therapy, meditation, or community support. Technology can’t replace human connection, but it can make help more approachable. With that in mind, here are four mental health apps that might make a difference in your journey, whether you’re looking for professional guidance, emotional check-ins, or just a moment of calm in your day.

Mindhouse

mental health apps

Mindhouse is transforming mental wellness by blending accessibility with a refined, science-backed approach to self-care. In an age where stress, anxiety, and burnout are all too common, this platform offers a thoughtfully curated mix of guided therapy, meditation, and expert-led programs designed for those who seek more than just surface-level solutions. Users can also access one-on-one sessions with experienced therapists for personalized support. A standout feature is its exclusive ‘Mental Health Circles’, which are intimate, expert-guided gatherings where trusted individuals connect, share, and grow together. Intimate and deeply personal, these private gatherings offer a safe space to individuals who come together to share, be heard, and uplift one another. Mindhouse is fast becoming the go-to destination for mental well-being, making self-care feel less like a luxury and more like a necessity.

YourDost

Image may contain Sticker Clothing Coat Face Head Person and Logo

Source link

PC20and20Nick.jpg

7 relationship questions that prove how strong your connection is, according to scientists

Relationships, of all kinds, are multifaceted—informed by shared experiences, personal histories and the way each has shaped a person’s outlook and personality. So, it seems reductive to think an online quiz of relationship questions could ever accurately know how healthy our connections (romantic, specifically) are, right? Well, sort of.

Last month, researchers at Stockholm University published a quiz created to place romantic couples on “The Valentine Scale”. The answers you give correlate to a certain number of points. At the end, the points are added together to give you a total score out of 21. Depending on how high or low your score is, the quiz will give you suggestions on how to improve, or affirmations on a healthy relationship.

These relationship questions are short with multiple-choice answers, ranging from how often you think about ending the relationship (a seemingly sure sign of doom) to how much you feel able to confide in your partner. The seven questions are:

  1. “I can collaborate well and solve practical problems with my partner.”
  2. “I feel that I can confide in my partner.”
  3. “When my partner and I disagree or have a conflict, I quickly get over it.”
  4. “How often in the recent past have you thought that your relationship is not good?”
  5. “How often have you recently considered separating from your partner?”
  6. “How emotionally close do you feel to your partner?”
  7. “Overall, how satisfied are you with your relationship?”

If it seems too good to be true, I agree. Seven questions and you’ll have a well-rounded insight into your incredibly nuanced relationship? Surely, not. However, the science does back it up. Of the 1,300 participants included in the two studies, the results were found to correlate strongly with other provable, reputable measures of relationship satisfaction. Of course, it can’t accurately quantify how many snipes it takes to move the needle down, or how many cups of tea in bed it takes to move it back up, but it can tell you interesting things about how you deal with conflict resolution, emotional closeness and trust. Intrigued? Question one, please!


Source link