From Kerala, known as God’s Own Country to Odisha’s temple heritage to Tamil Nadu’s magnificent temple architecture, the sacred city of Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh and the cultural richness of West Bengal, India’s spiritual and artistic legacy has shaped its identity for centuries. It is this enduring heritage that found a contemporary expression on the runway at Paris Haute Couture Week through Rahul Mishra’s latest collection.
His latest collection, Devi: The Eternal Muse, transformed the Paris runway into a celebration of mythology, sculpture and painstaking craftsmanship, reinforcing the growing influence of Indian couture on fashion’s most prestigious stage.
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For his collection, Mishra looked beyond fashion archives and into India’s sacred artistic heritage. Inspired by more than 2,000 year old South Indian temple sculptures, he imagined what would happen if ancient stone carvings could come alive as haute couture. Calling the collection almost like time travel, the designer sought to revive the same ideas and symbolism that once inspired the sculptors, transforming them into wearable works of art through painstaking hand embroidery and sculptural craftsmanship.
Mishra made history as the first Indian designer to showcase on the official Haute Couture Week calendar in 2020, and this July marks his 14th showing. So far, he has never taken a season off.

Inspired by the feminine divinity found in ancient Indian temple sculptures, Devi explored the idea of revealing beauty hidden within form, much like a sculptor chisels stone. Rather than relying on spectacle alone, Mishra built a narrative around intricate hand embroidery, sculptural silhouettes, metallic textures and fluid drapery that blurred the line between garment and wearable art. The collection featured tones of white, bronze, gold, charcoal and black, each enhancing the illusion of carved stone coming alive on the runway.
The show’s luxury appeal lay not only in its visual grandeur but also in the extraordinary hours of artisanal work behind every creation. Thousands of embroidery techniques, executed by skilled Indian craftspeople, elevated each couture piece into a collectible work of craftsmanship. Mishra’s philosophy of slow fashion continues to position luxury as something rooted in human skill rather than mass production, giving global couture clients a deeper appreciation of Indian heritage.
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The presentation drew global attention with celebrities including Cardi B attending in Rahul Mishra couture, while Isha Ambani also embraced creations from the collection. Their appearances reinforced Mishra’s growing appeal among international luxury clientele who increasingly seek couture that combines exclusivity with cultural storytelling.
Mishra occupies a unique position in global luxury fashion. As the first Indian designer to become a regular fixture on the official Paris Haute Couture calendar, he has steadily shifted international perceptions of Indian fashion, from being recognised primarily for craftsmanship behind European maisons to being celebrated for original couture design.