MAVITRRA’S Bindu Sharma on Building Bespoke Diamond Jewellery

Share this on

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
Share on email
Mavitrra

TheGlitz in conversation with Mavitrra’s Bindu Sharma

Mavitrra's exquisite bridal jewellery
Mavitrra’s exquisite bridal jewellery

The Indian jewellery market is vast and varied. Lab-grown diamonds promise affordability. Fast fashion offers instant gratification. Heritage brands deliver legacy and weight. And yet, despite the noise, natural diamonds still carry something intangible: emotional heft, generational value, the quiet assurance of permanence.

Somewhere between tradition and trend sits Mavitrra, a bespoke diamond jewellery brand built on collaboration, craftsmanship, and personal storytelling. Founder Bindu Sharma doesn’t chase scale or speed. She creates pieces that reflect the people who wear them. We sat down with her to talk about intention, process, and what it means to build jewellery that lasts beyond a season.

Bindu Sharma, Founder, Mavitrra
Bindu Sharma, Founder, Mavitrra

How did Mavitrra begin? What made you start?

Mavitrra started as a personal project. Indian jewellery felt polarised: either rooted in tradition or chasing global trends. There wasn’t much room for something intimate and intentional. I wanted to create pieces that told stories: milestones, transitions, quiet victories.

I began designing for friends and family, listening to their lives and translating that into jewellery. That collaborative process felt more meaningful than selling finished products. Over time, I realised this approach could become a brand. Mavitrra was never about scale. It was built on emotion, craftsmanship, and the belief that fine jewellery should feel personal, not just decorative.

When someone walks in, what do you ask them first?

I don’t start with budget or specifications. I ask about intent: “What is this piece meant to represent?” Jewellery is usually tied to something: an engagement, a milestone, self-reward, closure. Understanding the emotion gives me direction.

I also ask about lifestyle. Are they minimal? Do they prefer bold designs? Are heirlooms important to them? These details shape everything: diamond selection, setting, weight, proportion. The initial conversation is the most important step. My role isn’t to impose a design but to interpret their story. When that foundation is clear, the design feels authentic.

You say every piece is collaborative. What does that actually look like?

Collaboration starts with conversation, sometimes long, sometimes emotional. The client shares their vision. I translate that into sketches. We review proportions, discuss diamond shapes, consider how the piece sits on the body, refine details like clasps and finishes.

It’s common to revisit a design multiple times. I encourage clients to question and refine. I also guide them through what works structurally, what enhances longevity, how to balance elegance with durability.

By the time the piece is ready, it carries shared intention. That journey makes it meaningful and irreplaceable.

Diamond Station & Two-Tone Pearl Motif Diamond Bracelet
Diamond Station & Two-Tone Pearl Motif Diamond Bracelet

The market’s full of options now – fast, cheap, flashy. Where does Mavitrra fit?

The market is incredibly dynamic. Fast fashion and mass production dominate visibility. Mavitrra doesn’t compete on speed or volume. We exist in the space of considered luxury, where design takes time, sourcing is responsible, craftsmanship is non-negotiable.

We focus on bespoke diamond jewellery that balances timelessness with modern sensibility. Instead of chasing trends, we prioritise longevity in design and quality. A Mavitrra piece isn’t meant for one season. It’s created to stay relevant for decades.

In a market driven by immediacy, we offer intention. In a space crowded with replication, we offer originality. There’s always room for brands that prioritise authenticity. Our clients aren’t looking for flashy. They’re looking for personal, refined, enduring.

When price becomes the question, how do you answer it?

I approach it transparently. I explain what contributes to value: diamond quality and certification, ethical sourcing, design exclusivity, skilled craftsmanship hours, structural integrity. Fine jewellery isn’t only about visible sparkle. It’s about unseen precision.

I also emphasise longevity. A well-crafted diamond piece is an heirloom. It holds emotional and material value over time. Bespoke jewellery is unique and unreplicatable.

That said, customisation allows flexibility: stone size, design complexity, metal weight. The goal isn’t to justify price but to provide clarity. When clients understand the layers behind the piece, price shifts from being a number to being a reflection of value.

Indian weddings are big, traditional, often gold-heavy. Are brides changing?

Yes. While tradition remains central, modern brides are more self-aware and style-conscious. They’re thinking beyond the wedding day. Many prefer versatile diamond pieces they can re-style and wear long after the ceremonies.

There’s a visible shift towards lighter, contemporary silhouettes that still respect cultural roots. Brides want statement pieces, but also comfort and individuality. They’re experimenting with mixed metals, unconventional settings, modular jewellery that transforms for different occasions.

What’s most inspiring is that brides are prioritising personal identity over societal expectations. They want jewellery that reflects who they are, not just what tradition dictates. At Mavitrra, we balance heritage and modernity, creating pieces that honour the past while fitting seamlessly into a bride’s future.

Emerald Gold & Rose Floral Gold bangle
Emerald Gold & Rose Floral Gold bangle

You work with foster homes and stray animals. Does that connect to the jewellery, or is it separate?

On the surface, it seems separate. For me, it’s deeply connected. Compassion, responsibility, and integrity guide both my personal life and my business. Supporting foster homes and caring for stray animals stems from a belief that success must be accompanied by empathy.

Mavitrra is built on conscious creation: thoughtful sourcing, ethical practices, meaningful relationships. That philosophy extends to community impact. While the jewellery doesn’t directly reference these initiatives, the values behind the brand reflect them.

I believe luxury and responsibility can coexist. True elegance lies not only in what we create but in how we contribute. Giving back isn’t a marketing decision. It’s a personal commitment. And clients today appreciate brands that stand for something beyond aesthetics.

What do you want someone to feel when they wear a Mavitrra piece?

Confident, seen, quietly powerful. A Mavitrra piece should never overpower the wearer. It should enhance their presence. Jewellery influences how someone carries themselves. It adds grace, assurance, emotional grounding.

More than admiration from others, I want the wearer to feel aligned with the piece. It should resonate with their personality and story. Whether worn daily or reserved for special moments, it should feel natural and meaningful. Ultimately, I hope every Mavitrra creation becomes part of someone’s life journey, something they cherish, remember moments through, perhaps even pass down. If a piece can hold memory and emotion while remaining timeless in design, it has fulfilled its purpose.

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
Share on email

Tags

Related articles

In the ever-evolving world of fashion and culture, TheGlitz truly avers that the most exciting collaborations are often those that bridge geographies, aesthetics, and philosophies. Enter a partnership that does exactly that: L’Atelier 1664 has announced a creative alliance with celebrated Indian design house Abraham & Thakore, marking a sophisticated confluence of modern French lifestyle and contemporary Indian design.
Once upon a time, a film star's book was predictable: a glossy memoir, a few controversial revelations, and a marketing blitz. But today, the script oops stories have changed. Celebrities are increasingly stepping away from scripts and spotlights to embrace the quiet power of the written word. And the result? Books that feel more personal, reflective... and sometimes surprisingly profound. TheGlitz delves beneath the superficial to find the writing between the lines... read on...
In the fast-moving world of beauty, where trends change overnight and consumer conversations evolve by the minute, Yuvika Saxena stands as one of the strategic minds shaping how brands connect with a new generation. This Women’s Day, Firsts & Fearless celebrates TheGlitz Super Woman 2026 Yuvika Saxena.
Few embody that resilience quite like Chaiti Narula... one of the most dynamic, sharp-witted editorial powerhouses in India whose career has shaped political, fashion, and cultural narratives for over two decades. Today, as Editorial Director at French Press Global and founder of Maison French Press, she continues to champion India’s creative ecosystem...
In an era where beauty is increasingly defined by consciousness rather than cosmetics, Sonal Gupta is quietly leading a movement that places integrity, wellness, and sustainability at the heart of skincare. As the founder of SQIN Botanicals, Sonal has carved a thoughtful path in the clean beauty space, blending the time-honoured wisdom of Ayurveda with modern skincare science.
In an industry often driven by trends, Drishti Madnani stands out for building beauty with purpose, empathy, and authenticity. As the Co-Founder and Beauty Expert of Shryoan Cosmetics, she has helped shape a brand that celebrates diversity, understands the nuances of Indian skin tones, and places representation at the heart of beauty innovation. This Women’s Day, TheGlitz Super Woman 2026 Drishti Madnani embodies is in... Read on.