A designer kurta pajama for men is the most versatile piece in an ethnic wardrobe. It works at a wedding, a Diwali dinner, a family puja, and a festive office event. The difference between one grabbed off a rack and one truly designed, cut, and finished by hand shows in every photo and every hour of wear. That is what this collection is about.
At Taroob, every designer kurta pajama for men begins with fabric selection and ends with hand finishing in our Amritsar atelier. Our master cutters draft the kurta and pajama as a pair, so both sit right together on the body. The embroidery is worked into the fabric stitch by stitch, the buttons are set by hand, and the seams are pressed clean before it leaves the workshop.
What makes a kurta pajama designer?
The word gets used loosely, so here is the difference, and you can see it the moment you put it on.
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Pattern drafting: full-grain patterns cut by hand for each size, so the proportions stay correct, unlike factory kurtas scaled from digital patterns
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Embellishment: Dori work, Zardozi, Kalamkari, Pichwai, and Sozni done by trained karigars. Handwork is part of the fabric; machine work sits on top and peels
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Fabric: chosen for feel, drape, and how it carries embroidery, not for being the cheapest option
Which kurta pajama for which occasion?
The right choice depends on the event, the season, and whether you are the groom or a guest.
- Weddings and baraat: silk or raw silk with fine embroidery, in emerald, maroon, navy, or ivory. Layer with a wedding Nehru jacket for structure
- Diwali and festive dinners: an embellished kurta in black, emerald, wine, or gold. Tonal embroidery, where the thread matches the base, is the most refined look
- Eid: white or cream cotton with subtle Dori or Chikankari, easy from morning prayers to dinner
- Puja and ceremonies: plain or printed cotton in white, cream, or soft pastels. See our Lucknowi kurtas for the classic straight cut
- Navratri and Garba: mirror work and bright colours in breathable cotton and light silk, built for movement
- Parties and cocktails: jacquard, silk, or richly embellished fabric with a modern cut. Browse our party wear kurta pajama
Choosing the right fabric
Fabric decides how the kurta drapes, photographs, and feels after hours of wear.
- Silk and raw silk: weddings, receptions, and evenings, with a natural sheen that carries embroidery
- Cotton: daily wear, summer weddings, Eid mornings, and puja, comfortable over long hours
- Linen: daytime weddings and festive brunches, crisp and textured
- Jacquard: texture woven into the fabric for men who want richness without heavy embroidery
New designs in 2026
The biggest shift this year is tonal embroidery on solid fabrics, where the thread matches the base for a refined, textured look. Black on black, ivory on ivory, and navy on navy lead the way. Kalamkari and Pichwai prints, looser pajama cuts over the slim churidar, and jewel tones like emerald, wine, and midnight blue are also shaping the new season.
How a kurta pajama should fit?
Fit is where a designer piece earns its place. A correct fit looks far more polished, and every photo shows it.
- The shoulder seam sits on the shoulder bone
- The chest closes without pulling across the buttons
- The kurta falls to mid-thigh for a modern look, or just below for a traditional one
- The sleeve ends just past the wrist bone
- The pajama sits at the waist, tapers slightly, and ends at the ankle without pooling
Customisation on fit and length is available on most Taroob sets, and our team can help you choose before you order.
Styling and layering
A designer kurta pajama for men is complete on its own, but layering lifts it further.
Gifting a designer kurta pajama
In Taroob's luxury gift box, a designer kurta pajama for men is a thoughtful gift for fathers, brothers, husbands, and friends, across Diwali, Eid, birthdays, and weddings. For paired his and hers gifting, see our anniversary gifts, and add a stole for men to complete a set.
Every designer kurta pajama for men at Taroob carries the same promise: handwoven fabric, hand-cut patterns, hand-worked embroidery, and a fit refined by master cutters in Amritsar. No laser cutting, no machine embellishment, no shortcuts.