Beyond pure aesthetics, Naari Magazine uses its platform to advocate for slow, ethical fashion. Traditional Rai clothing relies heavily on organic materials like wild nettle ( allo ) and cotton, colored with plant-based, natural dyes.
If you are looking to develop this further, I can help you by:
Draping a traditional Fariya as an asymmetric cocktail skirt.
Naari (meaning "woman") Magazine serves as a cultural artifact for the (primarily from Eastern Nepal, Sikkim, Darjeeling, and Kalimpong). Unlike mainstream Vogue-style fashion media, Naari Magazine’s fashion section is not merely about trends; it is an ethnographic negotiation between ancestral identity and contemporary womanhood.
The search for a detailed story regarding an "exclusive" photoshoot of this nature involving for Naari Magazine does not yield an official, verified editorial narrative.
The magazine’s fashion blog segment presents for urban Rai women in Siliguri, Kathmandu, or Delhi: