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Embroidered net suit — sage green from the Multan atelier
A sage green this quiet doesn’t ask for attention — it just gets it. This embroidered net suit from Hammad Bespoke Official pairs a softly sheer net shirt, hand-embroidered along the gala and hem, with wide-leg ivory tissue trousers and a fringe-edge zari net dupatta. It sits within our Luxury Embroidered Suit line at the Multan atelier, built for occasions that call for less weight than bridal wear but no less detail.
For a net suit for women who wants formal dressing without the heaviness of a bridal piece, this works for a wedding-season dinner or an Eid evening alike. The straight-cut kurta keeps its sheer body close to the frame, while the gala and borders carry the embroidery, leaving the rest of the net free to breathe.
Net, the fabric behind the silhouette
Net has carried hand-embroidery on the subcontinent for generations. The open lattice structure of netted fabric gives every stitch a grid to anchor to, rather than fighting a dense ground cloth. Our Master Artisan works directly onto that lattice, building each resham floral row by row rather than repeating a stamped pattern.
Reading the ensemble — shirt, trouser, dupatta
The shirt anchors the look. Its open gala carries dense resham florals that thin into scattered gold zari toward the chest, then gather again along the hem border. Sleeves stay sheer, closed only by a narrow embroidered cuff. The wide-leg tissue trousers ground the silhouette in solid sage green, giving the sheer top something opaque to play against.
The dupatta repeats the same zari thread, scattered lightly across the net body and finished on all four edges with a fine fringe. Worn loose over one shoulder rather than pinned tight, the fringe moves with every step — the kind of detail a guest notices a second time, walking past.
The atelier’s craft
Resham and zari, worked by hand
Every gala and border on this suit is hand-worked in resham silk thread, a technique tracing back to Mughal-era court embroidery, where thread density once signaled rank as much as decoration. Our Master Artisan chalks each floral motif by hand before the needle touches the net, then fills it in satin stitch before adding the zari accents. A piece at this density runs roughly 35 hours of embroidery time at our Multan atelier.
Bespoke customization and fit
Nothing is cut before your measurements are recorded. A guided WhatsApp consultation covers your full 37-point measurement profile — kurta length, shoulder width, sleeve drop — specific to this straight-cut silhouette. Under the Bespoke Fit Guarantee, your suit ships only after a toile review confirms fit, a step that matters most for orders placed sight-unseen from the USA, UK, or Canada.
Worldwide delivery and garment care
Every order ships insured and tracked from Multan, typically arriving in 4 to 6 weeks depending on embroidery density. Net is delicate, so dry clean only, store the suit flat rather than folded along the embroidery, and keep steam away from the resham and zari work directly.
Frequently asked questions
Can this embroidered net suit be made to my exact measurements?
Yes — we record your full 37-point measurement profile over a guided WhatsApp consultation, and nothing ships until you’ve confirmed fit on a toile.
Do you ship this net suit to the USA or UK?
Yes. It ships insured to the USA, UK, Canada, UAE, and worldwide, tracked door to door from our Multan atelier.
Is the embroidery hand-done or machine-printed?
Every gala and border is hand-embroidered in resham and zari by a single Master Artisan — no print, no machine repeat, so no two pieces finish identically.














































































