Palace Atelier – There is something about Jaipur that stays with you โ€” the warmth of its sandstone facades, the rhythm of its craftspeople at work, the regal hush of its palaces. It is this sense of history that the city-based jewellery brand Tribe Amrapali and The Palace Atelier have channelled into a jewellery collection that celebrates Jaipurโ€™s royal legacy through a contemporary lens.

The Palace Atelier, led by Gauravi Kumari โ€” from the erstwhile ruling family of Jaipur โ€” is a concept store started in 2024 that blends traditional crafts with modern design. โ€œThere have been integrations and collaborations Iโ€™ve done with other brands,โ€ says Gauravi, โ€œbut this feels particularly special because it carries cultural and historical context and sparks conversation. My great-grandfather, Man Singh always intended for Jaipur to be a cultural capital โ€” a city of the arts โ€” and that spirit, I feel, had waned for a while.

What weโ€™re doing now, in our own small way, is reviving that purpose. โ€ History as a guiding force At the heart of the collection lies the Pachranga flag (which still flutters above Chandra Mahal at the City Palace) โ€” the five-coloured royal emblem of the Kachwaha dynasty, first adopted by Raja Man Singh I in 1585 after his victory in Kabul. The flagโ€™s stripes of red, white, yellow, green, and blue, representing earth, air, water, fire, and space, are woven into the conceptual fabric of the line.

The designers avoid a literal translation, instead interpreting its vitality through colour, form, and rhythm โ€” an aesthetic equilibrium that runs across the necklaces, earrings, bracelets, and rings. For Gauravi, the Pachranga collection is as much about storytelling as it is about design. โ€œIt takes a bit of history thatโ€™s been part of the palace for generations and gives it a modern spin,โ€ she explains.

โ€œEven if someone discovers the colours of the flag through a pendant or a pair of earrings, it invites curiosity. It starts a conversation.

And that, to me, is what matters โ€” that Jaipur remains at the heart of it all. โ€ Tribe Amrapali, meanwhile, brings its own sensibility โ€” youthful, experimental, and accessible. โ€œBoth Tribe Amrapali and The Palace Atelier are Jaipur-first brands,โ€ says Akanksha Arora, CEO, Tribe Amrapali.

โ€œSo we wanted to take something deeply emblematic of the city โ€” the Pachranga flag โ€” and reinterpret it in a way that feels playful and rooted in artistry, without tipping into gimmickry. Itโ€™s about giving something symbolic a contemporary spin, for men and women across the spectrum.

โ€ The collection also draws from the royal insignias and architectural motifs of the City Palace โ€” the arches, lotuses, and sun emblems โ€” all rendered through traditional craftsmanship: hand engraving, repoussรฉ-style detailing, intricate stone setting, enamelling, and even threadwork. Each piece feels refreshingly unpretentious โ€” jewellery that does not need an occasion to be worn. Stylistically, the pieces are designed for layering โ€” sun pendants paired with charms, cuff bracelets stacked with fine chains, and details set with semi-precious stones, pearls, and gold accents โ€” combinations that allow the wearer to express themselves with ease.

It is easy to imagine these pieces dressing up a white shirt and denim as effortlessly as they complement the Pachranga sari or the pleated Pachranga skirt from the apparel line. The menโ€™s line, too, takes a measured approach. Think pendants strung on leather cords, bracelets with subtle detailing, and buttons featuring the Pachranga insignia.

โ€œMen in Jaipur love their bandhgalas,โ€ Akanksha adds with a laugh, โ€œand we wanted the menโ€™s jewellery to feel just as effortless โ€” something that could dress up their look without being loud. โ€ The pieces neither pander to nostalgia nor chase modernity for its own sake.

Instead, it occupies that elegant in-between โ€” where lineage meets lifestyle. There are moments when certain motifs edge toward the familiar, but the restraint in design lends the collection a quiet confidence.

For Gauravi, that is the real purpose of the collaboration. โ€œI want people, especially those who visit Jaipur and know very little about its past, to see that history continues to guide what we do,โ€ she says. โ€œThrough jewellery, through design, through conversation.

Even if the jewellery feels light and fuss-free, it still sparks curiosity about what the colours symbolise or where they come from. If it gets someone to ask a question, itโ€™s already done its job.

โ€ Pieces from the collection go up to โ‚น19,500.