Engraved silver platter
For close family — chaurasi shagun, paat-pooja, vidaai trays.
From ₹1,200 a piece. Engraved with the couple's names. Boxed, sealed, and delivered to your address in Gurgaon, Noida, or South Delhi the morning of the function.
In North Indian Hindu households, chandi has carried weight at every wedding moment — the betel-leaf trays at sagai, the kalash for kanyadaan, the diya lit in the new bride's kitchen on the first morning after vidaai. The metal is auspicious, but the feeling is older than that: a piece of silver doesn't fade out of a household. It moves from the wedding cupboard to the everyday tray to the grandchild's school-prize photograph.
Most NCR families layer their return-gift list across three tiers — the cousin tier (silver-plated, around ₹1,800), the close-family tier (engraved platter, around ₹4,200), and the matriarch tier (cast 999, around ₹18,000). The arithmetic is forgiving: an eighty-guest list at ₹2,400 average is ₹1.92 lakh, which sits well under the catering line and outlasts it by four decades.
We work mostly with families in GK, Defence Colony, Vasant Kunj, DLF, and Sector 44 Noida — alongside a small Gurgaon community spread between DLF Phase 1 and Golf Course Road. The brief is usually the same shape: a date in November or February, a guest count, a half-decision on the platter, and one phone call with the matriarch before anything goes to the engraver.
Pieces ordered most often by Delhi NCR families this season. Each one lives in our ready-stock or one-week-production line.
For close family — chaurasi shagun, paat-pooja, vidaai trays.
Lights the mandap. Lights the bride's new home.
The first ritual gift on the sagai morning.
For aunts, cousins, the friends who arrived three days early.
The reliable workhorse. Doubles for desserts in the new home.
For matriarchs, the priest, and the four uncles who matter.
Most NCR weddings buy 60–80 percent at Entry, 20–30 percent at Considered, and a handful at Marquee. We'll sketch a layered breakdown after a fifteen-minute WhatsApp call.
Silver-plated, ready-stock, muslin pouch and ivory box. For the cousin tier of the guest list — 80 to 200 pieces is the usual count.
Hand-engraved platters, diya sets, photo frames, kumkum trays. The shagun layer — chosen for close family and the wedding's inner ring. 40 to 80 pieces.
Cast 999 silver — sikkas, statement bowls, plinths. For matriarchs, the priest, the family astrologer. 8 to 25 pieces in a numbered run.
Use this if you're scoping the brief alone. We'll send a proper timeline after the first call.
Anything missing? Send the question to WhatsApp — the founder replies within four hours.
Our standard MOQ is 50 pieces — enough for an intimate sangeet circle or a close-family shagun list. We do take smaller orders (25–49 pieces) on the ready-stock pieces from our Tier 1 range, with a 12% short-run surcharge. For 200+ guest lists we run a dedicated production slot.
Send the wedding date and a rough guest count. We'll come back with a tier sketch and a budget within four hours.