Naari Magazine New Bong Beauty Gouri Boobs Expo ✦ Must See

So the next time you see a woman in a classic Bengali cotton saree but with funky silver earrings and chunky boots — remember, she might just be a reader of , where fashion isn't about following trends, but about telling your own golpo (story).

While there are several models named Gauri/Gouri in the fashion industry, there is no official or widely recognized editorial feature titled "New Bong Beauty Gouri" in Naari Magazine that includes the specific explicit elements mentioned.

Move over, checks. The new obsession is the . Local designers are now printing tram lines, baby taxi yellow stripes, and the cursive letters of Boi Para onto dresses, shirt-dresses, and even saree borders. Wearing the city’s chaos on your sleeve (literally) is the highest form of Bong style. It is gritty, it is loud, and it is ours.

The writers and stylists at Naari Magazine are predominantly Bengali women. They know the struggle of Tollywood influenced makeup trends. They understand why a Kohl-lined eye (Kajol) is more important than a smoky eye in Bengali aesthetics. They write from lived experience, not a press release.

So the next time you see a woman in a classic Bengali cotton saree but with funky silver earrings and chunky boots — remember, she might just be a reader of , where fashion isn't about following trends, but about telling your own golpo (story).

While there are several models named Gauri/Gouri in the fashion industry, there is no official or widely recognized editorial feature titled "New Bong Beauty Gouri" in Naari Magazine that includes the specific explicit elements mentioned.

Move over, checks. The new obsession is the . Local designers are now printing tram lines, baby taxi yellow stripes, and the cursive letters of Boi Para onto dresses, shirt-dresses, and even saree borders. Wearing the city’s chaos on your sleeve (literally) is the highest form of Bong style. It is gritty, it is loud, and it is ours.

The writers and stylists at Naari Magazine are predominantly Bengali women. They know the struggle of Tollywood influenced makeup trends. They understand why a Kohl-lined eye (Kajol) is more important than a smoky eye in Bengali aesthetics. They write from lived experience, not a press release.