When Indian model Bhavitha Mandava arrived at this year's Met Gala, the reaction to her look was unusually divided.
From a distance, her Chanel outfit looked disarmingly simple: a sheer zip-up jacket and what appeared to be a pair of low-slung jeans. Around her, the usual theatre unfolded - sculpted gowns and silhouettes, outfits that declared themselves before their wearers could.
In comparison, Mandava's look seemed to hold back. Except it didn't. The "denim" was not denim at all, but silk muslin, printed and constructed to mimic it - a detail later noted by fashion websites. The simplicity, in other words, was carefully engineered.
That contrast shaped much of the reaction. Some saw it as a quiet twist on the Met Gala's excess, even a subtle challenge to it, while others felt it didn't quite match the scale of the event.
Indian media coverage mirrored the divide - some praised the minimalism, others questioned whether the moment had been undersold. On social media, the debate turned sharper, touching on how Indian representation is received, framed and sometimes flattened on global stages.














