1. Pink Chikankari Lehenga Set
Pink chikankari lehenga is a combination people keep returning to, year after year, and this set makes the reason obvious pretty quickly. It's a mukaish lehenga finished with gota pearl embroidery, paired with a matching gota pearl blouse and a georgette mukaish dupatta with pearl detailing running through.
What stands out is the restraint. There's a shimmer, sure, but nothing shouting for attention. The soft pink base carries a morning puja just as easily as it carries dinner that same evening, and not every lehenga for Diwali actually manages that.
2. Maroon Multi Thread and Mirror Work Lehenga
If pastels aren't really your colour, maroon is worth a proper look. Built on hand embroidered thread and mirror work, this one comes with a statement backless blouse and a tissue dupatta finished with an embroidered border.
Maroon has this habit of looking deeper and richer the moment the lights turn warm — and that's basically the whole mood of a Diwali evening. The mirror work catches movement well too, so it photographs nicely without you needing to pose too hard for it.
3. Mint Green Chikankari Lehenga Set
Not everyone wants red and gold on repeat every single year, and that's fair. This one's a proper break from it: a georgette Mint green lehenga with fine chikankari embroidery, paired with a knotted silk blouse and a net dupatta finished in mukaish work.
Mint green reads cooler and a bit more modern than the usual festive palette, but it doesn't lose the warmth Diwali calls for. That knotted blouse is a small detail, but it nudges the whole set slightly away from strictly traditional, without abandoning it entirely.
4. Blue Embroidered Chikankari Lehenga Set
Blue really doesn't get enough credit as a festive colour. This Blue chikankari lehenga sits on a soft georgette base with fine hand embroidery, paired with a matching blouse and dupatta carrying the same delicate work through.
It lands somewhere between understated and rich, which is why it works so well as a lehenga for Diwali. Dress it up with heavier jewellery for the evening, or keep things simple for morning puja — either way, it doesn't feel out of place.
5. Zeenat Chikankari Lehenga Set
Last on the list, and probably the most polished of the five. The Zeenat set is a pink chikankari mukaish lehenga with gota pearl embroidery, paired with a matching blouse and an organza dupatta detailed with pearl and gota throughout.
The organza dupatta gives it a slightly more structured finish than the others here, so it feels a touch more elevated. If you want a lehenga for Diwali with a bit more presence for the evening, without it tipping into too much, try this one on first.
Styling Notes That Actually Matter
Whichever one you land on, styling is where most of the outfit's success actually happens, not the shopping part.
- Pick one statement jewellery piece and build the rest of the look around it
- Keep the dupatta drape simple — it photographs better and it's one less thing to fix all night
- Wear shoes you can genuinely stand in for hours, not just ones that look good sitting down
- A small potli or clutch beats anything bulky
- If the embroidery's already doing the talking, let your makeup sit back a little
Which One Actually Suits Your Evening
People ask what the "best" lehenga for Diwali is, and the honest answer is that it depends entirely on how your evening's shaped up. A quieter, puja-focused night at home suits something lighter — mint green or blue, for instance. A bigger gathering with dinner and dancing suits something with more presence, like the maroon or the Zeenat set. There isn't one correct answer here, just the one that actually fits your evening.
Final Thoughts
None of these five are trying to be the loudest thing in the room, and that's really the point of good festive dressing. Each one leans on decent fabric, real handwork, and a silhouette you can actually move in, which matters more than how heavy an outfit looks in a catalogue shot. When you're choosing a lehenga for Diwali this year, go with whatever feels most like you — not whatever photographs "the most festive." That instinct is usually right.




