CHENNAI: When Bhuvaneshwari got married in 2023, she couldn’t bring herself to throw away her wedding flowers. “They weren’t just decorations..they were part of a day filled with emotion, colour, and memories I wanted to hold on to,” she says. Instead of pressing them in a book or letting them dry and fade, she did something different. She printed them onto fabric and turned them into a saree, a shirt, and a kurta. “These are pieces I can wear, feel close to, and keep forever.”
That idea soon grew into something bigger. House of Murah is the brand she started to transform people’s special flowers into clothing using eco-printing. This natural technique captures the delicate shapes and colours of leaves and petals.
Bhuvaneshwari has always been drawn to colour, texture, and creativity. “