The Engineering Shararas for Mehndi

Khala’s Verdict. The sharara is not a shy silhouette. For a Mehndi. It dictates a posture of open confidence. The wide, flowing pants and fitted knees force a particular gait. A measured, graceful step that comes from the hip. Not the knee. This is why it is perfect for the ceremonial actions of a Mehndi. Sitting with your legs folded to the side. The flare creates a beautiful pool of fabric. Standing to greet guests. The pants fall back into a clean, aristocratic line. It teaches you to move with intention.

The Golden Rule for a Mehndi is this: the volume of your sharara must be in proportion to your height and the scale of the venue. Too much flare in a confined space is clutter. Too little in a grand ball room is insignificance.

Is a sharara the same as a lehenga or palazzo?

No. Absolutely not. This is a critical technical distinction. A lehenga is a full skirt attached at the waist. A palazzo is a wide leg trouser cut from a single, flowing pattern. A sharara is a specific hybrid. It is a trouser cut with a fitted knee that then explodes into a flare from the mid calf down. This engineering has direct consequences in a Liverpool ball room. The fitted knee prevents the fabric from catching under your heels or the heels of others on a crowded, potentially slippery dance floor. A lehenga skirt can twist and wrap around the legs. A palazzo can drag and trip you. The sharara’s construction offers controlled movement. The fabric weight is also pivotal. A ball room floor is often polished wood or marble. A heavy silk sharara will have too much drag. A lightweight Net has the correct kinetic recoil. It flares and falls back neatly with each step. Temperature wise. Liverpool venues can be draughty yet become humid when full. Net provides breathability where heavy velvets or brocades would suffocate.

The movement of a Net sharara is its defining drama. During the Mehndi ceremony. As you sway to music or walk to greet guests. The Net should flare out with a soft, whispering sound. Then collapse back gently against the legs. It should not drag. It should not stand away from the body stiffly. The key pain point many brides face is confusion between a sharara and a gharara. A gharara is distinct. It is shorter in length. Often ankle length. And features a much more pronounced, gathered flare from above the knee. Not the calf. It is a more traditional, vintage silhouette. The gharara can often be heavier and more restrictive. The Deemas construction solves the movement issue by reinforcing the flare seam with a hidden Bukram (horsehair) braid of precise width. This supports the Net to sway beautifully without ever losing its shape or becoming tangled. The hand embroidery is anchored with a blanket stitch on the reverse of the Net. This prevents the weight of the sequins and threads from tearing the delicate fabric during vigorous movement.

The Craftsmanship

  • Net Gauge: We use a 4mm hexagonal hole Net with a 120 denier thread count. This provides opacity for lining while maintaining ethereal drape.
  • Primary Lining: 22 mm Grip Silk. Not Atal. Grip Silk is a fine, matte silk blend that clings gently to the skin without static. Preventing the sharara from sliding and eliminating itchiness.
  • Structural Lining: A secondary layer of cotton voile between the Net and embroidery. This acts as a canvas. Distributing the weight of hand embroidery across a wider area to prevent pull and tear.
  • Hem Architecture: A 2 inch wide, flexible Bukram (horsehair braid) is hand stitched into the hem of the flare. This invisible support gives the flare its memory and bounce.
  • Seam Engineering: All flare seams are French seamed. Then finished with a micro stitch to prevent fraying under the stress of movement.
  • Waistband Core: The waistband contains a inner core of non stretch cotton twill. This prevents rolling or curling after hours of wear and sitting.
  • Zardozi Anchoring: Each heavy metal thread (Kalabattu) in the Hand Embroidery is knotted individually on the reverse side. Not run across the back. This allows each motif to move independently with the fabric.
  • Hook & Eye System: We use a three point heavy duty hook and eye closure on the choli. Reinforced with a parallel set of internal safety snaps. This prevents any sudden failure.
  • Edge Binding: All internal edges are bound with silk bias tape. Not merely overlocked. This eliminates chafing and adds durability.
  • Vent Construction: The side vents of the sharara are lined with a matching solid chiffon. This prevents the Net from catching on footwear or jewellery.
  • Thread Consistency: Embroidery is done with Japanese silk threads for colour fastness. And all construction stitching uses a polyester core spun thread for tensile strength.
  • Weight Mapping: The placement of embroidery motifs is mapped digitally first to ensure balance. Heavier work is concentrated on the choli and upper pants. Lighter work on the flare to aid movement.

Module 5: Performance Matrix

Fabric Type Weight Class Ball Room Risk Factor Drape Character
Net (Ours) Light Low Fluid, Airy
Heavy Silk Velvet Heavy High (Overheats, Drags) Stiff, Bulky
Chiffon Light Medium (Can cling, static) Fluid, Soft
Brocade Heavy High (Restrictive, Hot) Stiff, Structured

The matrix shows why Net is the superior choice. Its low weight and risk factor coupled with fluid drape make it engineered for the dynamics of a large, active ball room event. It manages temperature and movement where others fail.

Is a sharara considered formal enough for a Walima or Nikah ceremony?

Yes. But with a critical caveat. The formality is dictated by the density of the Hand Embroidery and the richness of the Net. A lightly embroidered Net sharara is perfect for a Mehndi. For a Nikah or Walima. You would select a design with heavier Zardozi. Perhaps with crystal overlay. And a richer colour palette. The silhouette itself is inherently formal and regal.

Khala’s Advice. Let us be blunt. Your body frame dictates the sharara’s proportions.

Pear Shape: Focus volume in the flare. Not the hips. Use a longer choli to elongate the torso. Avoid embroidery on the hip area.

Apple Shape: Choose a high waistline on the sharara pants. This creates a defined waist under the choli. Opt for a vertical alignment of embroidery on the choli.

Hourglass: You can carry most volumes. Emphasise the waist with a fitted choli and a defined waistband. Balance the flare proportionally to your shoulders.

Petite: Avoid a double layer flare. It swallows the frame. Opt for a single layer Net sharara with a medium flare to elongate the torso. The ‘Fall’ (length from waist to floor) must be exact. Any pooling will shorten you.

Tall: You need volume to match your frame. A double flare or a heavier border on the hem will ground the silhouette beautifully. You can carry a longer ‘Fall’ with elegance. The ‘Fall’ is everything. For every inch of height difference. We adjust the flare’s starting point and width. A 5’2″ bride and a 5’9″ bride in the same design will have completely different pattern pieces. Not just shortened or lengthened.

A well crafted Net sharara is not a one event garment. The investment lies in its future utility. After the Mehndi. The piece can be transformed. The heavy embroidered choli can be paired with a simple silk saree or palazzo for a post wedding dinner. The sharara pants themselves. If the embroidery is concentrated on the hem. Can be professionally cut and finished at the ankle to create a stunning, unique pair of evening trousers. This is the mark of true couture. It is a garment that evolves with you. For your Mehndi in Liverpool. It offers the perfect blend of tradition and kinetic comfort. For your future events. It becomes a versatile archive piece. To see how our Hand Embroidery designs transition seamlessly to more formal ceremonies. explore our collection of best for Mehndi and Nikah.

A Sharara holds visual authority at a Mehndi because it creates vertical flow without breaking the leg line. Unlike a Gharara, the Sharara flares from the waist in one continuous movement. In a Liverpool Mehndi, this matters. The body appears lengthened. The silhouette reads cleanly from distance. This is essential in a Ball Room where scale exaggerates imbalance.

Khala’s verdict is clear. A Sharara dictates posture by forcing even weight distribution. When the waist is supported correctly, the torso lifts naturally. Shoulders settle. Movement becomes economical. The golden rule for a Mehndi is this: if the Sharara does not fall cleanly from the waist, no amount of embroidery will save it.

Ball Rooms introduce specific failure points. Flooring is smooth and reflective. Seating compresses fabric repeatedly. Heat accumulates quickly. A Net Sharara must remain light enough to manage temperature while resisting collapse. In Liverpool, where Ball Rooms are often expansive, excessive volume causes drag and visual heaviness. The flare must be calibrated, not exaggerated.

Is a sharara the same as a lehenga or palazzo?

No. A Sharara is constructed as two flared legs joined at the waist, not a circular skirt like a lehenga or a straight fall like a palazzo. This structure allows controlled flare without rotational drag. In a Mehndi setting, this means easier walking, cleaner turns, and less resistance against the floor.

Movement exposes construction. During a Mehndi, Net should sway and then recover. It should flare gently when turning and recoil into place when still. It must never collapse around the ankles. This answers the key confusion between silhouettes. A Sharara is not decorative nostalgia. It is functional tradition when built correctly.

At Deemas Fashion, internal canvas layers are inserted at the waist and reinforced seams are used at flare junctions. This prevents downward creep caused by dense hand embroidery. The Sharara moves with the body instead of fighting it. Tradition remains practical because it is engineered deliberately.

  • High filament Net selected to prevent leg cling.
  • Net thread count tested for recovery after compression.
  • Grip Silk lining used to avoid itching.
  • Atal lining avoided due to heat retention.
  • Canvas reinforcement at waistband.
  • Bukram width adjusted to support Sharara flare.
  • Hem weighted to control swing.
  • Zardozi anchored with double locking stitches.
  • Seam strength increased at inner leg.
  • Inner panels softened for prolonged wear.
  • Waist hooks reinforced for movement stress.
Fabric Type Weight Class Ball Room Risk Factor Drape Character
Net Light Low Fluid
Raw Silk Medium Medium Structured
Velvet Heavy High Stiff
Organza Light Medium Crisp

Body architecture determines whether a Sharara flatters or overwhelms. Pear shapes benefit from controlled flare that balances the hip. Apple shapes must avoid dense embroidery at the waist. Hourglass frames can carry balanced hand work easily. Petite women should avoid excessive volume. It shortens the frame. Opt for a Sharara with moderate flare to elongate the body. Tall women can carry deeper flare without distortion.

Is a sharara considered formal enough for a Walima or Nikah ceremony

Yes, when constructed correctly. Formality is dictated by fabric quality, embroidery discipline, and fit. Net Shararas with refined hand embroidery transition easily from Mehndi into Nikah or Walima with styling adjustments. Colour depth and jewellery selection complete the shift. A well built Sharara does not retire after one event. It adapts. Pair it with a heavier top or structured dupatta for later ceremonies. This is how investment dressing works. For brides planning cross event continuity, explore Hand Embroidery Nikah dresses built with the same construction logic and respect for fabric behaviour.