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VICTORIA · AUSTRALIA

Melbourne

मेलबर्न

The atelier's own pattern-cutting and finishing workshop — where the cloth from India meets the woman who will wear it.

Victoria, Australia

Melbourne atelier — editorial reference, finished black velvet set standing in for the pattern-cutting workshop
Atelier reference from the current Aratrikkaz catalogue.

The cluster, in Ketki's words

On Melbourne.

elbourne is the cluster that does not weave anything. It is the part of the atelier where the Indian cloth becomes a wardrobe. The workshop is small, deliberately small. There is a long cutting table, a half-mannequin on a stand, a wall of butter-paper toiles pinned up in chronological order, and a window that faces west onto a jacaranda. This is where every piece spends its last three weeks before it leaves us. This is where the saree is matched to the woman who has commissioned it, the blouse is drafted to her measurements, the lehenga waist is taken in or let out, the hem is set to her preferred shoe.

I work this room myself for the first hour of every commission. Not because the cutter is not better at the cut than I am — she is — but because the first hour is when the cloth and the wearer's measurements meet on the same table, and I want to see that meeting. We talk about how the woman intends to wear the piece. A sangeet in Parramatta is not a reception in Singapore is not a Tuesday in Melbourne. The cloth knows the difference. The cut must know it too. We have, on more than one occasion, sent a piece back to Banaras for a longer pallu because the wearer is tall and the standard length would have looked clipped on her. The cluster understands. The cluster waits. The cluster ships again.

The hand-finishing is the part you cannot see. Every interior seam is closed by hand, every facing bound in matching silk, every hem rolled — not blind-stitched on a machine. It is the work that nobody on the street will ever look at, and it is the work that decides how the piece sits on the body after the third wear, the tenth wear, the hundredth wear. That is the difference between a piece you wear to one occasion and a piece you wear into a wardrobe. We are building wardrobes. The cloth comes up from the Indian clusters; the cut happens in Australia; the woman puts it on and it fits her. That is the whole atelier.

The vocabulary

Techniques.

pattern-cutting
the toile-on-paper draft of every piece, drawn to the wearer's measurements before a single thread is cut into the Indian cloth.
hand-finishing
the closing seams, the hem-rolls, the silk-bound facings — every interior edge sewn by hand so the inside of the piece is as quiet as the outside.
blouse construction
the saree-blouse drafted to the body — bust dart, back panel, princess seam — built on a calico mock-up before the silk is touched.
fitting
the one-on-one session in the Melbourne studio, in person or over video — sleeve length, hem fall, blouse seat, the small adjustments that decide whether you will actually wear the piece.
custom-stitch consultations
the back-and-forth with the Indian clusters when a piece calls for an addition — a deeper border, a hidden monogram, a personal motif worked into the pallu.

The hands

The karigars
we work with.

  • Atelier portrait stand-in — the senior pattern-cutter who works the Melbourne long table
    Atelier reference from the current Aratrikkaz catalogue.

    Margaret Liu — senior pattern-cutter

  • Atelier portrait stand-in — the hand-finisher who closes every interior seam by hand
    Atelier reference from the current Aratrikkaz catalogue.

    Anjali Menon — hand-finisher

  • Atelier portrait stand-in — the blouse-construction specialist who drafts every saree blouse to body
    Atelier reference from the current Aratrikkaz catalogue.

    Sarah O'Donnell — blouse construction

The visit log

When Ketki was last
in the workshop.

  • May 2026

    Ongoing — the Melbourne workshop is open every weekday and Saturday morning. Ketki is in the room for the first hour of every new commission.

  • April 2026

    Workshop expanded with a second cutter and a dedicated fitting alcove for in-person sessions; the toile wall now runs the full length of the room.

The atelier in Melbourne is where the cloth from India meets the woman who'll wear it.

— Ketki Gupta · on the Melbourne cluster