Festive opening quarter cover
This Week
15 May 2026

— On the cover

Haldi.
On the rise.

By Anaita Verma·Published from the engine · 15 May 2026
An Indian woman's hand resting on a folded cream linen letter, a brass-nib fountain pen alongside

— From the editor's desk

A note before you read.

Eight days ago I closed the last issue with a sentence I've been turning over since: the festive window does not wait. In the time it took the engine to re-score the taxonomy, three attributes I'd marked stable last week began to lift, and one I had quietly hoped would hold its ground gave way. That is the honest texture of a buying calendar — it moves while you sleep.

This issue is shorter than I'd like and longer than the rail demands. I've kept the chapters in their usual order so you can skim the parts you need: what's rising, what's ceding ground, what walked the runway, and the next window the calendar is opening. The anti-pattern at the end is the one I hope you will read twice.

I write these briefs the way I used to write margin notes in a stocksheet — close to the cloth, sceptical of clean stories, and always with the line manager's P&L in mind. If something here changes a buy you were about to make, write to me. The next issue is, in part, made of those replies.

— Anaita

— Listen instead

Anaita reads the brief.

A sixty-second narrated tour of this week's issue.

1 min · narrated by Anaita · headphones recommended

60-sec brief

Anaita opens the week

Anaita is a composite character — built from twelve years of buyer interviews. She is not a single real person. Read more on our manifesto page.

01From the buying floor

Wedding-ritual occasions own Q2; festive and casual cede ground entirely.

A buyer's desk in Mumbai — swatches, a notebook, an open laptop
The desk where the maths used to live in margin scribbles.

This is week 1 of TrendSense. Eight days have passed since the last issue went out, and the engine has re-scored every attribute in the taxonomy, ingested the latest from the runway, and re-read every signal that pointed at the festive window now 11 days away. Here is what stood out.

The occasion mix in Q2 2026 is unambiguously dominated by the wedding-ritual cluster — Haldi, Mehendi, and Bridal are the only three attributes with both score momentum and a clear delivery window. Evening Wear and Cocktail are holding steady but are passenger categories this quarter, not drivers. Everything outside the wedding orbit — Festive, Loungewear, Puja, Workwear — is either structurally off-season or structurally weak.

The wedding-ritual stack is the quarter. Haldi leads at score 68 and is the only attribute in this category with both urgency and volume — capsule load for October delivery is the call, not a debate. Mehendi at 53 and Bridal at 52 are rising in tandem, confirming the full pre-wedding occasion arc is activating together rather than sequentially. Load these three as a coordinated cluster, not as isolated SKU decisions.

Load this quarter with the wedding-ritual cluster as the primary bucket: Haldi is the lead, take meaningful depth now for October delivery at the ₹2,500–5,500 price band where search-to-conversion is tightest; Mehendi and Bridal should follow at controlled width — 8–12 SKUs each, not broad assortments. Brands with proven ethnic occasion credibility — Libas, Avaasa, and any in-house capsule line — should anchor Haldi and Mehendi; Bridal can carry one premium tier option up to ₹8,000 but do not overweight it. Party gets a light, targeted load of 4–6 SKUs in the ₹1,800–3,500 band to capture the pre-monsoon spike — do not deepen it. Everything else — Festive, Loungewear, Workwear, Puja, Casual — is a hold or a plan-for-later; no incremental OTB this quarter outside the wedding-ritual and Party buckets.

02Top of mind

What's rising. Three to watch.

A moodboard wall — pinned tear-sheets, swatch ribbons, runway clippings
The moodboard where the rising attributes first surface — pinned, debated, kept.
  1. 01

    Rising

    Satin

    fabric

    Score 62 / 100

  2. 02

    Rising

    Linen

    fabric

    Score 60 / 100

  3. 03

    Rising

    Co-Ord Set

    silhouette

    Score 58 / 100

We don't buy what was. We buy what is about to be — and pay the difference if we're wrong.
— From the editor's notebook
03Quietly fading

What's ceding ground.

A retail rail receding into shadow, a single garment being lifted off
A category lets go quietly. Decline rarely announces itself.
  • Camel

    Fading

    color · score 66 / 100

  • Banarasi Silk

    Fading

    fabric · score 59 / 100

04On the runway

Six looks that moved this week.

Backstage at an Indian designer's runway show — garments on a rolling rail, soft lighting

Cobalt anarkalis on the rail, week 18 — backstage at a Mumbai show.

Pankaj & Nidhi AW26

Pankaj & Nidhi

AW26

Tarun Tahiliani AW26

Tarun Tahiliani

AW26

Anamika Khanna Couture 26

Anamika Khanna

Couture 26

Sabyasachi Couture 26

Sabyasachi

Couture 26

Manish Malhotra Couture 26

Manish Malhotra

Couture 26

Rahul Mishra AW26

Rahul Mishra

AW26

Drawn from the 8+ Indian designers the engine watches across four current seasons.

The calendar is the dominant forcing function. Everything else is a smaller wave on a larger tide.
— From the editor's notebook
05The next window
An open Indian wedding-season almanac with festive dates marked in ink, brass fountain pen alongside
The window the calendar is opening — dates marked, by hand, in ink.

Eid al-Adha 2026.

In 11 days.

27 May 2026 → 28 May 2026

Categories the engine projects will lift through this window:

  • festive×1.4
  • party×1.2
06Anti-pattern of the week
An open notebook page — handwritten notes from a buyer's review
A page from the notebook — the anti-patterns get circled in ink.

On Lavender

(1) DO NOT load lavender in a synthetic-blend fabric (Bhilwara poly-blend) for the Monsoon drop — synthetic lavender fades and oxidizes after washing, driving returns and 1-star reviews that will damage the color story for future seasons. (2) DO NOT price the Eid kurta set above ₹4,500 — at that price point, the lavender buyer is comparing to bridal adjacents and the color loses its 'modern-festive' positioning; the brand will be competing on embellishment quality it cannot win at this buy depth. (3) DO NOT extend the Eid capsule live date beyond 2026-05-12 — any drop after that date lands with less than 15 days before EOSS and will not achieve full-price sell-through; if the order missed the 2026-04-17 fabric deadline, redirect fabric to the Monsoon separates drop and write off the Eid window entirely.

— Anaita Verma

A stack of past printed magazine issues with visible spines, on a warm cream linen surface

— Past issues

The archive.

  1. Issue IYou are here

    15 May 2026

    Wedding-ritual occasions own Q2; festive and casual cede ground entirely.

  2. Issue IIComing soon

    · · · · · 19 May 2026

    The week the festive window starts to bend.

  3. Issue IIIComing soon

    · · · · · 26 May 2026

    A note on what the runway is telling us about pre-Diwali.

  4. Issue IVComing soon

    · · · · · 02 June 2026

    Six attributes the engine raised its hand on.

  5. Issue VComing soon

    · · · · · 09 June 2026

    Quietly fading: when a hero category lets go.

A new issue lands every Tuesday morning. Past issues will be available in the archive once they ship.

— Next issue lands Tuesday

Want this in your inbox every week?

Read in eight minutes. The week's most important attributes, the next festive window, and one anti-pattern to avoid — written from the engine in Anaita's voice.

Subscribe — Tuesdays