Yashica Dutt (The Asian Age)

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Indian style gurus jazz up Western wardrobes

Indian designers have now moved to dressing international headliners and are making headlines themselves.

West finds spiritual anchor in Hinduism

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Decades ago photographs of the kurta-clad Beatles wearing marigold garlands in a Rishikesh ashram were splashed across the world press.

Emotional spell check to correct e-mail tone

Teeth gratingly angry at that monster of a client who has rejected your presentation 17 times in a day and you are scratching your head over how to reply to yet another one of his mails in a calm mann

When ‘love’ turns toxic

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There’s no stopping girls from falling for bad guys. Despite Rahul Mahajan’s track record of alleged physical abuse of his first wife and numerous flings, Dimpy tied the knot with him.

Wall turns canvas

If you still feel sore about being trashed for treating your house walls as a crayon canvas, this is the time for redemption.

Tall artistes take a fall

We are a demanding audience. We expect our stars to scandalise, movies to move and musicians to monkey around on stage.

Jewelled pieces explore animal instinct

While tribal chic has already been declared the hottest trend for the season, animal farm is another venue, where jewellery makers have been doing their rounds.

India’s Woodstock gets embroiled in politics

Just when one thought, ours was becoming a land of free music, eco-friendliness and a place capable of holding the Indian version of Woodstock, politics played a spoilsport.

Syringe therapy can ease you into heels

Men have porn and women have shoes. Show any woman a good-looking, tantalising pair and you will find her salivating.

Luxury gets dearer

With the sharp dip in the value of Euro, most designer brands now come way closer to the dream versus reality line of the common man, surprisingly making them barely affordable (as opposed to non-affo

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I want to begin with a little story that was told to me by a leading executive at Aptech. He was exercising in a gym with a lot of younger people.

Shekhar Kapur’s Bandit Queen didn’t make the cut. Neither did Shaji Karun’s Piravi, which bagged 31 international awards.