
From plush jacquards and textured silks to embroidered linens and soft cottons, R R Décor’s product profile focuses on high-end furnishing fabrics that speak to both tradition and contemporary elegance. The materials are curated for visual calm and tactile warmth, ideal for residential, boutique hospitality, and bespoke interior projects.
However, working with handlooms in the current context comes with its own challenges. Lead times are longer, skillsets are diminishing, and scale is limited. “There’s a balance between preserving authenticity and meeting the demands of modern interiors,” shares Rohit. “But for us, that extra effort is worth it. Handlooms give soul to fabric.” This sense of quiet soulfulness is a hallmark across R R Décor’s collections.
The most recent embodiment of this ethos is Acantha—a collection that explores muted colourways and the beauty of embroidery on soft, natural grounds. New collections at R R Décor are launched thoughtfully typically two major ones each year, with smaller capsule introductions in between. The focus is not on seasonal churn but on curating long-living collections that remain relevant over time. Each drop is narrative-driven and guided by a strong material story.
In terms of broader industry trends, the brand has observed a growing appreciation for subtle textures, layered neutrals, and soft minimalism in furnishings. There’s also a renewed demand for fabrics that are both functional and emotionally resonant those that feel as good as they look. Embroidered details, tone-on-tone weaves, and linen-based compositions are emerging as preferred choices in both residential and boutique spaces.
Over the years, RR Décor’s collections have grown to include high-end furnishing fabrics, including everything from rich jacquards and soft cottons to delicate embroidered linens and textured silks.
For Khemka, the looms, the rhythm of handwork, and the patient art of dyeing were his learning lessons. As his early years were spent among artisans, where design wasn’t about trends but about process, handlooms taught him how to see colour. “Not just look at it, but really feel its temperature, its mood, its silence.” The brand became synonymous with understated luxury in Indian interiors, offering materials that held both memory and modernity. Raw silks, natural linens, and hand-dyed cottons—each fabric was chosen not only for its look but for its ability to linger, to comfort, and to age gracefully.
Read the full story that first appeared in The Stylist, Interior Special Print issue here:
Leave a Reply