Fashion & Luxury The sartorial silence Deciphering the secular shift toward private opulence In the economy of taste, the most potent signifier of wealth is no longer the logo that clamours for attention, but the textile that breathes a subtle confidence Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Jun 2nd 2026 | Hyderabad In sophisticated circles of 2026, to announce one's wealth loudly is to reveal one's inexperience of it. The meretricious logo—once the universal grammar of aspiration—has been demoted. In its place stands something older, quieter and, in every sense, more expensive: exquisite textile, meticulous construction and the earned patina of things that improve with age. Quiet luxury, long the well-kept secret of "old money" aesthetics, has transcended its origins to become the definitive benchmark of modern taste. This is no mere fashion cycle. It represents a rigorous cultural application of restraint, shifting the centre of gravity from the ostentatious displays of the...
There are 3,369,444 firearm licenses now active in India with 9,700,000 firearms registered to them. According to Small Arms Survey there are 61,401,000 illegal firearms in India. One third of them are in UP. There are over 400,000 active gun licenses in Punjab, surveys indicate that there are 11 lakh firearms in all in the state. Many licensed gun holders declare them as heirlooms. I inherited seven beautiful guns from my father including a perfectly balanced Mauser .375 rifle for which ammunition was no longer being made. I surrendered all the weapons as they only lay at the Secunderabad Armoury owned by my friend Vishnu Vardhan Reddy Keesara. I sold them all, but could never figure out why the person who bought the Mauser did so as there was no manufactured ammunition to be had? When LK Advani was Home Minister, I had suggested in a note that the average cost of gun licenses should be at least ₹5000-10000 per year to disincentivise ownership. Nothing happened as there was oppos...