For the groom

A groom sherwani has one job: hold its own in the whole wedding frame.

The strongest choice is not the loudest one. It aligns with the event, the partner’s palette, the venue, the climate, and how the garment will move and photograph for hours.

Reviewed July 15, 2026 · Naap Editorial

Request consultation

Design for the event

Nikah often rewards tonal work and clean construction. Baraat can support stronger contrast, jewellery, and ceremonial detail. Walima directions can become sharper, cooler, or more contemporary.

Coordinate without matching literally

Use material temperature, metal tone, and one shared colour relationship. Exact matching can flatten both outfits; controlled contrast usually creates a stronger frame.

Think in portrait and full length

Collar, shoulder, and chest work dominate close portraits. Hem, trouser, footwear, and stole matter in full-length photographs. Review both crops before locking the design.

Plan for movement

Test sitting, embracing, walking, and raising the arms. A garment that only works while standing still is not correctly fitted for a wedding.

What to send Naap

Include the event date and city, venue type, partner’s palette, preferred base, budget range, footwear direction, reference images, and any fit issue you repeatedly experience in formal clothing.

Sampling-stage disclosure

Naap is building this operating model now. No order, workshop capacity, final price, or fit remedy is confirmed until it appears in an accepted written quote.

Editorial method: this guide separates body measurements, garment specifications, and planned operating terms. Read the Naap measurement method.

Send your wedding brief