उत्सव
The Festival Calendar · 2026
India's festivals are not events on a calendar. They are the rhythm of the year — each one with its colour, its prayer, its earring. This is when to wear which jumka.
Coming Soon
ईद
Eid ul-Fitr
1 April
Pan-India
The end of Ramzan. Homes are filled with sevaiyan, new clothes are worn, and the morning begins with prayer. It is a day of joy after a month of patience.
Wear
Kundan and stone for Eid. The Laila collection carries the Mughal elegance this celebration deserves.
* Date based on expected moon sighting — may vary by 1–2 days.
बैसाखी
Baisakhi
14 April
Punjab & North India
The Punjabi new year and harvest festival. Bhangra fills the fields. It is one of the most joyful days of the calendar — loud, bright, and unashamed about it.
Wear
Bold colour and movement. The Bahar jumka swings when you dance — which is the point on Baisakhi.
अक्षय तृतीया
Akshaya Tritiya
28 April
Pan-India
The most auspicious day to buy gold. Weddings are celebrated, new ventures begin, and gold is purchased as an offering to prosperity. Whatever begins on this day is said to never diminish.
Wear
The Rani collection — classic gold, heavy, traditional. There is no more fitting day to wear it.
आगे आने वाले
ईद अल-अधा
Eid ul-Adha
7 June
Pan-India
The festival of sacrifice, marking the end of Hajj. Families gather, prayers are offered, and the day is marked with generosity — meat shared with neighbours, with those who have less.
Wear
Kundan and stone for the grandest Eid occasion. Formal, beautiful, worthy of the day.
* Date based on expected moon sighting — may vary by 1–2 days.
तीज
Teej
29 July
Rajasthan, UP, Bihar
Women fast for their husbands' long lives and swing on decorated jhulas. The colour is green — the colour of the monsoon that arrives just in time. Songs fill the air.
Wear
Green enamel and colour — the Bahar collection mirrors the monsoon mood of Teej perfectly.
रक्षाबंधन
Raksha Bandhan
9 August
Pan-India
A sister ties a thread around her brother's wrist. He promises to protect her. It sounds simple. It carries a lifetime.
Wear
Something delicate and personal. The Chandni collection for the intimacy of this day.
जन्माष्टमी
Janmashtami
16 August
Pan-India
Krishna's birthday. Temples are decorated with flowers, dahi-handi is broken, and the midnight hour brings the city to its feet. Gold and joy, in equal measure.
Wear
Classic gold for Krishna's celebration. Heavy, traditional, as the occasion demands.
नवरात्रि
Navratri
2 October
Pan-India
Nine nights of the goddess. Garba circles spin in Gujarat, dandiya sticks clash in Rajasthan, and Durga Puja fills Kolkata with light. Each night has its colour, its prayer, its song.
Wear
The Bahar collection for nine nights of dance. Colour, movement, and the goddess watching.
दशहरा
Dussehra
11 October
Pan-India
The day Ram defeated Ravana. Effigies burn across the country. It is a day of victory — loud, fierce, triumphant. The kind of day that calls for something bold.
Wear
Gold and statement. The Rani collection for the day good wins.
करवा चौथ
Karva Chauth
20 October
North India
She fasts from sunrise to moonrise. When the moon appears and she looks through the sieve, the jumka in her ear has been there since morning. Gold, heavy, hers.
Wear
Classic gold. The Rani collection for the night of the moon.
दीवाली
Diwali
20 October
Pan-India
The festival of lights. Diyas line every window, fireworks write light across the sky, and every home smells of mithai. Wear everything. This is not a night for restraint.
Wear
The Bahar collection was made for this night. Meenakari enamel in every colour the fire throws.
छठ पूजा
Chhath Puja
24 October
Bihar, Jharkhand, UP
The most austere festival in the calendar. Devotees stand in rivers at dawn and dusk, offering arghya to the sun. There is nothing like it — ancient, demanding, beautiful.
Wear
Silver for the river vigil. Something that belongs to the water and the early light.
क्रिसमस
Christmas
25 December
Pan-India
Celebrated across India with its own particular warmth — midnight mass in Goa's churches, plum cake in Kerala, Carol singing in the hill stations. India makes Christmas its own.
Wear
Silver filigree for winter evenings. The Chandni collection for the quietest, warmest holiday.
बीत गए
मकर संक्रांति
Makar Sankranti
14 January
Pan-India
The harvest festival that marks the sun's northward journey. Kites fill the sky across Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Punjab. Women dress in yellow — the colour of sesame flowers and new beginnings.
Wear
Silver filigree that catches winter light. Light enough to dance with the kite string.
वसंत पंचमी
Vasant Panchami
2 February
North India
Saraswati's day. Spring arrives, fields turn yellow with mustard, and children place their books at the goddess's feet. The colour is saffron-yellow without exception.
Wear
Colourful enamel in yellow and gold tones. The festive collection was made for days like this.
महाशिवरात्रि
Maha Shivratri
26 February
Pan-India
The great night of Shiva. Women fast and pray through the darkness, wearing white and silver. There is something austere and beautiful about this night — it asks for simplicity, not spectacle.
Wear
Delicate silver. For the night vigil, something quiet that honours the mood.
होली
Holi
20 March
Pan-India
The festival of colour. Gulaal fills the air — pink, green, saffron, violet. No one leaves unchanged. Wear something you love enough to ruin, and jump in.
Wear
The Bahar collection's enamel colours look even better after a little gulaal. Wear them without fear.
“The right jumka for the right moment — that is all it takes.”