Grief becomes gold, obsession unfurls in silk, and surrender floats on tulle—inside Rahul Mishra’s most soul-stirring Paris couture showcase yet
What happens when grief speaks in sequins, when longing takes shape in organza, and when love is no longer a feeling but a journey stitched into fabric? With “Becoming Love”, Rahul Mishra did not just present a couture collection at Paris Haute Couture Week—he offered a spiritual catharsis dressed in gold, petals, and poetry.
Rooted in personal loss, this collection unfolds as a meditative traversal through the seven stages of love, as understood through Sufi philosophy: dilkashi (attraction), uljhan (infatuation), ishq (love), aqeedat (reverence), ibadat (worship), junoon (madness), and finally, maut (death). But this death isn’t an end. It is a surrender, a folding in, a transcendence. And in Mishra’s hands, it becomes silk.
The show opens in a hush, with whites and soft golds washing over the runway like the first stirrings of attraction. Heart motifs—sculpted, embroidered, floating—pulse softly across bodices, a heartbeat in progress. Here, dilkashi is gentle. It’s the glance before the gaze, captured in pearl veils and dresses that barely graze the skin. Love begins with lightness.
Then, like emotion swelling in a chest, comes uljhan. Colour deepens. Silhouettes widen. Tension arrives in sculpted shoulders and intricately webbed embroidery. The garments begin to entangle themselves—twists of fabric, metallic threadwork like veins carrying desire. Infatuation is no longer quiet. It glimmers. It glows. It tightens.
At ishq, Mishra offers the most harmonious silhouettes—cohesion between form and feeling. A golden gown with halos of sequins surrounding the chest echoes love in full bloom. Not desperate, not hungry, but sure. At this stage, Mishra’s craftsmanship sings. His floral embroidery swells with confidence, suggesting a love that’s reciprocal, rooted, and radiant.
From this high comes the humbling. Aqeedat and ibadat shift the tone from romance to reverence. It is here that the influence of the divine enters—reflected in high necklines, covered arms, and surreal headpieces by milliner Stephen Jones. These garments feel less like clothes, more like altars. One pale gown, covered in cascading pearls and topped with a dome-like veil, resembles a prayer whispered into fabric. Worship becomes wearable.
Then, love fractures. Junoon takes over. Madness, rendered in deep crimson, blackened roses, exaggerated silhouettes, and disoriented patterns. This is the drama of obsession—emotional excess given couture shape. The highlight: a monumental gown resembling an erupting rose in wine-dark sequins, worn by Cardi B as she closed the show. It is theatrical. It is stormy. It is the moment before everything implodes.
And then—silence.
Maut, the final act. Not destruction, but dissolution. The garments grow still again. A final look floats by in shades of ivory and faded blush, barely there, a mirage of all that was felt. Death here is not an ending but a soft return. The beloved becomes memory. The embroidery fades. The silhouette softens. The body is carried by spirit now.
In “Becoming Love”, Mishra elevates couture into a vessel of emotional narrative. There are no gimmicks here, only metaphors. No excess without intent. The roses are not florals—they’re wounds, they’re hearts, they’re declarations. The gold is not glamour—it’s illumination. The structure is not restraint—it’s discipline, the kind that lets feeling take form without losing itself.
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It’s a collection that proves that love—like fashion—is not a static thing. It’s a process. A becoming.
And Rahul Mishra, in this moment of spiritual and creative maturity, reminds us that to love deeply is to surrender beautifully. Even in grief. Even in madness. Especially then.