Founded 2015 · Social Impact · Sustainable Fashion
Artwork of India. A story about craft, conscience, and a corporate lawyer who chose to follow the thread back to its source.
Chapter One
There is a particular kind of childhood memory that never quite leaves you. For Deepika, it was the potliwala — the travelling cloth merchant who would arrive at the neighbourhood with bundles of handwoven fabrics, and the aunts and neighbours who would gather around like it was a festival. The colours, the textures, the stories woven into every thread.
Those days are gone. The potliwala's small business was dismantled by e-commerce algorithms and mass production. Traditional weaving jobs evaporated. The weavers, block printers, and craftspeople who had inherited these skills across generations found themselves without markets, without reach, without a voice.
Deepika decided to become that voice.
In 2015, after a decade building legal frameworks for Unilever, Aviva, and Max Bupa, Deepika founded Kalakari India — a social-impact fashion brand whose name means, simply, artwork of India. Not a charity. Not a hobby. A real enterprise, built with the same rigour she brought to every legal brief she ever wrote.
Chapter Two
Most sustainable fashion ventures position themselves as curators. Kalakari India does something different — it acts as an infrastructure layer for artisans, giving weavers, block printers, painters, and craft families the digital presence, market access, and commercial relationships they could never build alone.
The philosophy is built on a simple but radical idea: the artisan is not a supplier. They are a brand partner. Their story, their technique, their community — these are the product.
Kalakari India works directly with weaver families and artisan communities — no traders, no exploitative middlemen. Every purchase funds a craft tradition at its source.
Artisans are listed on Myntra, Flipkart, Amazon, and Kalakariindia.com — giving remote craft communities a global storefront they could not build or afford alone.
A digital media campaign that centres real artisans, not models. Real faces, real hands, real stories — reframing sustainable fashion as a human movement, not a product category.
Chapter Three
Kalakari India's heart lies in the block prints of Bagh and the weaves of Chanderi and Maheshwar — both from Madhya Pradesh, the same land where Deepika studied law. But the brand celebrates the full breadth of India's textile heritage.
Every fabric is either purely handmade or a hybrid of machine-spun cloth and hand-crafted colouring — using natural dyes, vegetable pigments, mud layers, and traditional dyeing techniques passed across generations. No fast fashion. No synthetic shortcuts.
Art Forms & Fabrics
Recognition
Recognised nationally for building a commercially viable social enterprise that disrupts the traditional handicraft supply chain — putting power and profit back in the hands of artisans.
Profiled as a phenomenally unconventional entrepreneur — a corporate lawyer turned social fashion disruptor — expanding Kalakari India's reach into B2C and B2B markets in North and Latin America.
From weavers in MP to block printers in Rajasthan — Kalakari India's network of partners, vendors, and service providers spans the breadth of Indian craft geography.
Beyond the Brand
Deepika's entrepreneurial spirit doesn't stop at Kalakari India. The same instinct for community-building and cross-cultural exchange runs through everything she does.
Elected by peers to lead one of India's most distinguished business school alumni networks — connecting graduates across continents, industries, and generations. A role that mirrors the same community infrastructure Kalakari India builds for artisans.
A committed participant in one of the world's most radical experiments in community, art, and self-reliance. Burning Man's principles of radical inclusion, gifting, and civic responsibility align closely with the philosophy Deepika brings to Kalakari India and her legal career.
Active member of IIMAGES — a registered society linking alumni across all 13 IIMs, facilitating peer mentorship, national development initiatives, and high-potential networking across 5 major Indian cities.
For four consecutive years, recognised alongside The Female Quotient and Deloitte as one of the minds shaping the future of cybersecurity — bridging her legal, compliance, and entrepreneurial expertise on a national stage.