"Silk saree" covers a wide family of very different cloths. The name on the label matters less than how the fabric behaves — how it drapes, how it catches light, how it wears through a long evening. Three of the most-asked-about at Aparajita are tissue, Katan and organza. Here is how to tell them apart, and how to choose.
Tissue: light that you can wear
Tissue silk is woven with a fine metallic thread running through it, which is what gives it that liquid, luminous sheen. It is lighter than it looks and drapes close to the body, so the pleats fall soft rather than stiff. Tissue reads beautifully under evening and low light, where the metallic catches and moves.
Wear it when: you want glow without weight — sangeets, receptions, dinners.
Keep in mind: the metal thread can snag, so keep it away from jewellery clasps and rough surfaces.
Katan: the classic weight
Katan is pure silk woven from twisted filament threads, the traditional base of a fine Banarasi. It has body and a gentle structure: pleats hold, the pallu falls with a satisfying weight, and the cloth ages well if you look after it. This is the silk people mean when they talk about an heirloom saree.
Wear it when: the occasion asks for presence — weddings, festivals, the pieces you expect to keep for years.
Keep in mind: store it folded in soft muslin and refold along different lines every few months so the silk doesn't crease at the seams.
Organza: structure and air
Organza is sheer, crisp and holds its shape, which is why an organza saree looks almost sculptural on the drape. It carries embroidery and sequin work well because the fabric gives them a frame. It is featherlight to wear despite looking substantial.
Wear it when: you want a modern, airy silhouette that still makes a statement — daytime events, summer functions.
Keep in mind: organza creases; fold it gently and steam rather than press hard.
So which one?
If you want glow and movement, choose tissue. If you want weight and longevity, choose Katan. If you want structure and a lighter, contemporary line, choose organza. None is more "premium" than another; they are simply different characters, and the right one depends on how you like a saree to feel when you move.
Whichever you choose, look for the marks of the hand: slight variation in the weave, a reverse that mirrors the front, real zari that has warmth rather than a flat, plastic shine. That is how you know you are buying cloth, not a copy.
