Virtual try-on, on your own photo
You upload a clear, full-length photo of yourself — front-facing, good light, plain background works best — and Baraat's AI try-on engine renders bridal lehengas, sherwanis, anarkalis, mehndi outfits, sarees, and reception gowns onto your figure. The result is not a generic mannequin shot or a Photoshop overlay; it is a full-body image of you, in that outfit, in that colour, with the silhouette and drape preserved as accurately as the technology allows in 2026. You can swap colours, swap embellishments, and swap silhouettes side-by-side — and decide whether the deep maroon velvet works on you better than the dusky pink, before you ever set foot in a boutique. For couples shopping across cities or even countries, this is the difference between three Saturdays of fittings and one decisive trip with a clear shortlist.
A look for every event, not just the wedding day
A South Asian wedding is six events, which means six outfits for the bride, six for the groom, and (depending on the family) coordinated outfits for the mothers, the sisters, the bridesmaids, and the wedding party. Mehndi night is colourful and floral. Sangeet is glittery and Bollywood-glamorous. The Vivah or Anand Karaj is the most traditional — heavy bridal lehenga or saree, Sherwani with kalgi or pagdi. The Reception leans contemporary — gowns, cocktail wear, contemporary cuts. Baraat's outfit planner gives each event its own outfit board: bride, groom, parents, siblings, party. Each entry has the look, the boutique or vendor, the cost, the fitting dates, and any pending alterations. Nothing falls through the cracks two weeks before the wedding.
Coordinated colour palettes across events
A common mistake on multi-event weddings is dressing each event in isolation, then turning up to the photo album with a clashing colour story across six days. Baraat surfaces all your event outfits on a single timeline view, side-by-side with their colour palettes, so you can see at a glance whether the Mehndi yellow and the Sangeet hot pink will sit comfortably next to the Reception ivory in your final wedding album. You can lock a "wedding palette" — say, jewel tones with gold accents — and the planner will flag any new addition that breaks it. Mothers, sisters, and the wedding party can be invited into the same view, so when an aunt is choosing her outfit for the Vivah, she can see what the bride and the bride's mother are wearing first.
Sourced internationally, tracked in one place
Bridal outfits in a UK South Asian wedding are sourced from everywhere: Chandni Chowk in Delhi, Karol Bagh in Mumbai, Karachi's Tariq Road, the Lulu Mall in Kochi, Asian boutiques in Wembley and Southall and Leicester, and increasingly from Sabyasachi or Manish Malhotra at their UK trunk shows. Each comes with its own currency, its own lead time, its own customs paperwork. Baraat's outfit planner records each piece in its origin currency — INR, AED, USD, GBP — and rolls it up into your home currency for the budget. Lead times and shipping windows are tracked so you know when something needs to leave Delhi to arrive in time for your fitting. Customs and import duty estimates are surfaced where they apply.
Fittings, alterations, and the day-of brief
A bridal lehenga typically needs two to three fittings. A sherwani needs at least one. The mother of the bride is often forgotten and ends up in alterations the week of the wedding. Baraat's planner schedules each fitting with a date, a location, and a note for the alterations tailor. As the wedding approaches, it generates a "day-of outfit brief" — what each family member is wearing to each event, what jewellery and accessories are paired with it, who is helping the bride get into the lehenga, who has the safety pins and the hair pins, and which event's outfit is in which suitcase. This brief, printed and given to the wedding planner, has prevented many of the small operational disasters that wreck the wedding-week vibe.
What's inside
Built to handle the full job.
AI virtual try-on
Upload your photo, see yourself in lehengas, sherwanis, sarees and gowns.
Per-event outfit boards
Mehndi, Sangeet, Vivah, Reception — separate looks, separate vendors, separate budgets.
Coordinated colour palette
Lock a wedding palette and surface clashes across the six-event timeline.
Family outfit tracking
Bride, groom, parents, siblings, wedding party — all on one shared planner.
Multi-currency vendor tracking
INR, AED, USD, GBP. Lead times, shipping, and customs estimates included.
Fitting & alteration calendar
Schedule fittings, track alteration deadlines, never miss a tailor appointment.
In real weddings
How couples are using it.
Trying on six bridal lehengas before a flight to Delhi
You're flying to Delhi in three weeks for the bridal shopping trip. Before you go, you upload your photo and try on lehengas from six designers — three Sabyasachi, two Manish Malhotra, one independent. You arrive at each boutique with a clear shortlist. Two days saved, and a much higher chance of leaving Delhi with the dress instead of an inconclusive flight home.
Coordinating six events across a Punjabi-Gujarati wedding
The Mehndi is in Gujarati floral palette. The Sangeet is Punjabi bling. The Anand Karaj is traditional red and gold. The Reception is contemporary ivory. Baraat's palette view stops you from accidentally wearing a hot pink lehenga at the Sangeet that clashes with the bridesmaids' coral lehenga choli.
Mothers and aunties choosing without dramatic phone calls
The bride's mother, the groom's mother, three aunts, and four bridesmaids each get edit access to their own row in the planner. They see what the bride is wearing for each event, see each other's choices, and pick their outfits without a six-week WhatsApp argument about who is wearing what shade of green.
Frequently asked