Aditi Chand (left) is one of the co-founders of Tilfi, a craft brand rooted in the handloom traditions of Banaras (right). Tilfi
Fashion & Beauty

Looming Large: Aditi Chand on Tilfi’s Plan to Put Banarasi Weaves on the Global Map

The co-founder of Tilfi, Aditi Chand, reflects on scaling Banarasi mastery without compromise, redefining heritage for a global audience, and building an India-born luxury house rooted firmly in Varanasi’s artisanal ecosystem.

Born in Banaras and built on the belief that true luxury lies in mastery, material integrity, and time-honoured skill, Tilfi is steadily reshaping the vocabulary of contemporary Indian craft. As a craft brand rooted in the handloom traditions of Varanasi, the team approaches heritage with innovation and technical rigour, before contextualising it for contemporary relevance.

Founded in 2016 by Aditi Chand alongside Udit and Ujjwal Khanna, Tilfi emerged from a five-decade-old family legacy in Banarasi weaving, but with a distinctly modern ambition: to create a global, craft-first luxury house grounded unapologetically in its city of origin. Even its name signals this intent.

“Tilfi” refers to a Banarasi weaving technique in which three coloured yarns run continuously without a break, symbolising the brand’s three ideals: Pure (natural materials), Handmade (craft-led processes), and Banaras (deep regional roots).

Today, working with over 2,000 specialised artisans and producing exclusively in Banaras, Tilfi oversees everything from first sketch to final weave—marrying in-house design with generational expertise. In conversation with Robb Report India, Chand reflects on building an enduring brand anchored in heritage, rigour, and the confidence of handmade excellence.

Robb Report India (RR India): While you consider yourself an “accidental entrepreneur”, how did your background prepare you for founding Tilfi, despite having no formal experience in fashion?

From left: the Rangana features Kadwa weaves; the Kashi is handwoven on a base of silk in Roopa Sona or Gold and Silver zari.

Aditi Chand (AC): Yes, I do often describe myself as an accidental entrepreneur because I did not come from a conventional fashion or design background. What prepared me was my professional, academic, and personal experiences.

Growing up, I lived and travelled across the length and breadth of our country as well as overseas. That gave me a deep sensitivity to culture, people, and tradition. Academically, my journey gave me rigour and an orientation towards structure, systems, and long-term organisation building.

I wasn’t trying to build a fashion brand. I was trying to build something enduring, and that has shaped both my journey and Tilfi’s from the beginning.

RR India: What, in your view, is the single most misunderstood thing about Banarasi weaving today—and how does Tilfi correct that narrative?

AC: One of the most misunderstood ideas is that buying directly from a weaver automatically supports the craft. Banarasi weaving is not an individual effort. It is the product of an ecosystem. Every textile is the outcome of a collective—design, graphing, loom setting, dyeing, weaving, finishing, marketing. No single participant is more important than the other.

Sustaining craft requires strengthening that ecosystem. It doesn’t need quick fixes or charity. At Tilfi, we take a long-term view—investing in skills, designing with intention, and maintaining consistent demand so livelihoods improve sustainably. That’s how we correct the narrative.

RR India: Where do you draw the line between “heritage” and “reinvention”?

Rangat is a rare and highly intricate handloom weaving technique from Banaras, known for creating multicoloured silk sarees with distinct, sharp color-blocked stripes

AC: Reinvention must be born out of mastery. You cannot meaningfully reinvent something you don’t deeply understand. Heritage gives you the codes and grammar; reinvention builds on that foundation. We don’t treat craft as a surface aesthetic. Innovation must come from deep respect and technical understanding. The line is immersion in tradition before attempting to rewrite.

RR India: Tilfi has expanded into metal work, translating Banarasi textile motifs into brass repoussé. How did this journey begin?

Tilfi has expanded into metal work.

AC: It began almost as a happy accident while designing our first store in Banaras. We wanted to explore crafts native to the city and discovered metal repoussé. It is a GI craft that predates handloom weaving. Its expression had largely been limited to temples, and we saw potential for new interpretations, much like we had done with weaving. For over four years, we created pieces only for our own spaces. The response was overwhelming, and earlier this year, we formally opened up metal repoussé as a body of work for Tilfi. It felt like a natural extension of our language into a new medium.

RR India: In hindsight, what risk defined Tilfi’s trajectory?

AC: Choosing to pursue the highest possible quality in Banarasi craftsmanship. It limits scale, speed, and access. But it was a conscious, long-term choice. We chose to go deep instead of wide. That decision has defined our identity, the trust we’ve built, and the investments we’ve made within the ecosystem over the past decade.

RR India: What makes a handloom piece truly luxurious?

The Shikargah Tales by Tilfi has zari vines, birds, animals, flora and fauna and scrolling jungle scenes.

AC: Handloom pieces age gracefully. They carry time. They soften, yet deepen. They hold memories of the wearer and of the hands that created them. That human presence is irreplaceable.

RR India: As demand grows, how do you preserve slow workmanship while building a scalable luxury business?

AC: By insisting on excellence at every level. Even with simpler techniques, that persistence must remain. Scale doesn’t mean dilution. It means better systems and higher standards. We will grow slowly, but we won’t compromise on integrity or our value system.

RR India: Speaking of growing, where do you see Tilfi 10 years from now?

AC: As a global name synonymous with India-born, craft-first luxury. A house that stands for excellence, timeless design, and cultural depth. We want to build a brand that is rigorous in its craft and generous to its people—deeply rooted in Banaras and the communities that make our work possible.