For couture behemoths Abu Jani and Sandeep Khosla, the opportunity to design a wedding came at a culturally pivotal moment. We were out of the throes of Nehru Socialism, nine years deep into post-liberalisation India. The Guest Control Orders — an infamous string of austerity measures applied from state to state between the 1960s and the 1990s, limiting the number of wedding guests and even the amount of food served — was a distant, distant memory. Cue the ‘Bollywood-ification’ of weddings: movies like Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994) and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) were changing how the public perceived shaadis. Austerity was on its way out. The big, fat Indian wedding was on its way in. Cut to 1997, merely two years after Bombay had become Mumbai. Abu and Sandeep had been working together for a little over a decade: crafting couture, championing Indian craft across the globe and navigating a meteoric rise to fame. They were well on their way towards becoming multi-hyphenates, with a fully sold-out debut furniture line and a jewellery collaboration about to bear fruit in London. Their newest venture? Interior designing — or playing “house doctor”, as Sandeep puts it, for a select few of their closest friends. They had just redesigned Jaya Bachchan’s home, decking the interiors with “crushed silk curtains, a technique we had revived,” reminisces Sandeep, when Jaya popped the question: would they help her design her daughter Shweta Bachchan’s wedding? The duo said yes.
“Shweta’s wedding was our first,” Sandeep recalls. The year is now 2025. We’re in Abu and Sandeep’s Juhu home, sitting in their decked-to-the-nines living room — exactly what you’d expect from the kings of maximalism. Steve Jobs wore turtlenecks, but Sandeep prefers a crisp white shirt: his go-to for media interviews like this one (“It’s AJSK, of course!” he laughs). The late afternoon light clings to the fabric, the only unadorned surface in the space. “Shweta is like our daughter, so of course, we said yes when Jaya asked us to design the whole affair,” Sandeep continues, exclaiming, “We even called it a royal wedding!”






