How To Match Bridal Jewellery With Wedding Outfits The Right Way
The art is knowing what to pair, what to hold back and where to let jewellery lead
If recent Bollywood weddings have made anything clear, it’s that bridal jewellery is no longer about matching sets or maximalism.
Take Rashmika Mandanna as a cue: temple jewellery, soft pink stones, statement earrings, and bangles across functions. Brides are thinking in chapters, focusing on how colour, texture, and form are placed. Symmetry, once central, is giving way to visual ease. Heirloom elements are styled with restraint — a weighty mathapatti offset by a bare neck, or a monochrome lehenga sharpened with architectural metals.
The era of the ‘statement set’ is quietly receding. In its place is a more deliberate approach, where the garment and jewellery respond to one another. Here’s how to think about it.
Begin with the dress
For Sanya Batra, founder of her eponymous label, the answer lies in the language of the garment. The silhouette, embroidery, neckline, and mood set the tone. “Jewellery should complement, not compete. If the garment is heavily detailed, I prefer keeping it intentional rather than overly layered. Simpler outfits allow room for statement pieces. Everything should feel like part of the same story.”
Yet, as Maheka Mirpuri, founder of her namesake label, suggests, tradition is no longer prescriptive. “Today, the process is more instinctive. If you’ve inherited or invested in a heritage design, it can become a starting point. Begin with what you love most. Build around something that speaks to you for a look that feels complete,” she adds.
More than an accessory
Jewellery often carries the emotional weight of a bridal look, where memory, identity, and personal expression come together.
“Jewellery is never an afterthought. It’s the energy that completes the story,” says Mirpuri. “When styling a bride, I begin with the outfit’s neckline, embroidery, and mood. If the ensemble is richly detailed, I let it breathe. Traditional styles sit beautifully against our textiles when styled in a way that feels current.”
Let the neckline decide
The neckline is where everything either clicks or falls apart. It determines how it sits and how the eye moves across the look.
“It depends on what takes priority. If it is a standout or personally significant element, the outfit can be styled around it to let it shine. In most contemporary settings, the outfit leads, and it is curated to enhance it. I see them as a dialogue rather than a hierarchy. Both should elevate each other,” says Batra.
A heavily embroidered lehenga, rich with zardozi or intricate handwork, benefits from a more focused jewellery edit. One statement accent, perhaps a gemstone choker or a heritage necklace, can anchor the look without overwhelming it.
Simpler ensembles invite experimentation, where layered necklaces or sculptural earrings take centre stage.
The power of colour
Colour reframes a look by introducing contrast, softness, or a subtle edge.
“When it comes to colour, I love a sense of play,” says Mirpuri. “Emeralds against ivories, deep rubies with blush tones, or even unexpected pairings like turquoise with gold. There’s also something incredibly sophisticated about tonal styling, layering within the same colour family as the outfit to create depth without distraction.”
Batra recommends selecting one dominant tone from the outfit and subtly echoing it in the jewellery. Rich hues like emerald, ruby, or sapphire complement neutral or tonal ensembles. Contrasts work best when placed with precision.
Dressing across moments
Each function brings a different mood, giving the bride space to shift tone, silhouette, and jewellery while maintaining a clear sense of identity.
“Daytime events like haldi or mehendi, call for lighter, playful elements like coloured stones or delicate layers work best,” says Batra. “Evening functions like sangeet or cocktail allow for bolder, more dramatic choices. Weddings and receptions call for a timeless approach and intricate designs that feel enduring. The idea is to align the jewels with the mood of the moment.”
“The wedding ceremony is where I lean into heirloom grandeur like polki, kundan, and traditional gold styles that feel timeless and almost storied,” adds Mirpuri. “For the sangeet or cocktail, this is where the modern Maharani comes alive. Diamonds, bold earrings, layered contemporary creations that move with you.”
She continues, “Pre-wedding celebrations are best kept light and joyful, with floral elements, pastel stones, and delicate gold touches. In more intimate moments leading up to the wedding, it’s about minimal accents, perhaps one defining detail, styled with ease. Because sometimes, the quietest choices make the strongest statement.”
At its core, matching bridal jewellery with wedding outfits comes down to understanding proportion, knowing when to let a single element lead, and allowing each look its moment
