Men’s festival wear at Diwas
This page brings together kurtas and kurta sets that work across the full festive calendar—Diwali, Eid, Gudi Padwa, Navratri, family poojas, and everything in between. The focus is on easy silhouettes, rich yet wearable colours, and details that feel celebratory without becoming overwhelming.
Under the Manyavar umbrella, Diwas positions men’s festival wear as youthful, accessible celebration dressing: inspired by tradition but cut for today’s lifestyles, commutes, and social plans.
What counts as festival wear here
This page covers pieces you can dress up or down depending on the occasion. You’ll typically find:
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Solid, printed, chikankari, and embroidered kurtas that can pair with pyjamas, trousers, or even denims.
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Party‑leaning styles like mirror‑work and sequin‑highlight kurtas for louder, high‑energy nights.
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Easy day‑wear pieces in breathable fabrics for poojas, house gatherings, and community events.
The idea is that one page should give you options for both “puja to party” and everything around it.
Fabrics and comfort for long festive days
Festivals often mean early starts, late nights, and lots of movement, so comfort sits right at the centre of festive wear at Diwas. Across collections, you’ll see:
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Cotton and cotton blends for printed, plain, and chikankari kurtas that breathe well during daytime rituals and casual celebrations.
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Viscose and blended viscose bases that drape smoothly and feel slightly more polished for evening functions.
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Art silk and jacquard textures in more dressed‑up pieces where a gentle sheen and structure match the mood of bigger functions.
These fabrics let’s you shift from family puja to social meet‑ups without you needing an outfit change in between.
Styles for different festival moods
Festive wear at Diwas is not one single look—it’s a spectrum from relaxed casual to full party mode. Within this page, you can think in three broad moods:
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Festive casual: Printed, solid, or chikankari kurtas in breathable fabrics for house poojas, brunches, and smaller celebrations.
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Elevated festive: Embroidered, self‑design, and subtly textured kurtas that work for bigger family gatherings, Diwali evenings, and special pujas.
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Party‑ready: Mirror‑work, sequin‑highlight, and strongly patterned kurtas designed for sangeet, Diwali parties, Navratri nights, and high‑energy events.
This makes it easy to build a small set of festival outfits that still feel different every time you step out.
Occasions
You’ll find pieces that work for:
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Family poojas, Gudi Padwa, and other ritual‑heavy mornings.
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Diwali week—office festivities, house parties, and card nights.
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Eid gatherings, community events, and society functions.
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Wedding‑adjacent celebrations where the dress code is “festive but not necessarily full sherwani”.
Instead of buying something you wear once, the goal is outfits that comfortably repeat across different festivals and circles.
Building a small men’s festival wear wardrobe
A focused men’s wardrobe does not need a lot of pieces—it just needs the right ones. Think of it as a mix of everyday‑festive kurtas and a couple of stronger statement options you can rotate through the season.
For example, two or three breathable printed or solid kurtas can anchor poojas, office celebrations, and casual get‑togethers. Add one embroidered or textured kurta for slightly more special evenings, and one party‑leaning style for Diwali nights, sangeet, or the biggest functions in your calendar. With this mix, you can keep changing bottoms, footwear, and layers to create fresh outfits without needing a huge stack of new clothes every festive season.
Styling ideas
Styling is what turns a simple kurta into a festival‑ready look. A few easy switches can take the same piece from low‑key to fully celebratory:
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Pair printed or plain kurtas with denims or chinos for casual office celebrations and small get‑togethers.
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Swap to pyjamas or churidars and ethnic footwear for poojas, family lunches, and Diwali evenings.
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Add a Nehru jacket, stole, or light bandhgala over simpler kurtas when you want a more put‑together festival statement.
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Use accessories—watch, kada, bracelet—as small upgrades that don’t add bulk but make the look feel complete.
The key is versatility: one well‑chosen festival kurta can give you multiple looks with the right bottoms, layers, and accessories.
Everyday celebration dressing
Diwas treats festive wear as something you actually live in, not just pose in. The pieces are made to handle real movement, real travel, and real memories—whether that’s running between houses for Diwali visits or staying out late at a sangeet.
For someone building a compact wardrobe, these kurtas become core celebration pieces you can restyle across years and festivals, in line with Diwas’ idea of celebrating tradition with a modern, easy‑to‑wear twist.
Men’s festival wear at Diwas is also designed to fit into real life around the celebrations. You can travel in these kurtas, move between homes for Diwali visits, attend office rituals, and still head out for late‑evening plans without your outfit feeling out of place. Across the page, the focus stays on pieces you can actually repeat—not one‑time outfits—so your wardrobe grows smarter with every festival, not just bigger.
FAQs
1. What counts as men’s festival wear at Diwas?
Men’s festival wear at Diwas includes kurtas and kurta sets in breathable fabrics, festive colours, and party‑ready details that work across poojas, Diwali, Eid, Navratri, and family functions.
2. Can I wear these outfits to the office during festivals?
Yes, many kurtas on the men’s festival wear page are designed to pair with chinos or trousers, making them ideal for office festive days and cultural celebrations.
3. Are there options for both simple and party‑style festival looks?
The page covers relaxed printed and solid kurtas for poojas, as well as more embellished, party‑wear kurtas for Diwali nights, sangeet, and high‑energy events.
4. Can I restyle the same festival kurta for different occasions?
Yes, by changing bottoms (pyjamas, denims, trousers), footwear, and adding or skipping layers like Nehru jackets or stoles, you can reuse the same kurta across multiple festivals and gatherings.
5. Are the fabrics comfortable for full‑day festive wear?
Most men’s festival wear options use cotton, viscose blends, or light art‑silk textures chosen to stay comfortable through rituals, travel, and evening events.