Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | gqindia.com | Sanjana Ray |Saloni Dhruv |Parth Charan |Ojas Kolvankar

    This year, GQ celebrates visionaries who aren’t waiting for the future, but building it. From boardrooms to digital platforms, these young trailblazers are setting trends, and turning bold ideas into movements, proving that leadership today isn’t about age, but about impact, imagination, and the ability to spark change, often one viral idea or revolutionary prototype at a time. These young changemakers aren’t just part of the conversation. They are the conversation.

  • 1 month ago | gqindia.com | Ojas Kolvankar |Saloni Dhruv

    At the Met Gala 2025 one accessory ruled the red carpet: the Cummerbund. Seen until now as a menswear relic, the cummerbund was reinterpreted at the MET in new and dizzying ways by an array of celebrities. Derived from the Hindustani word kamar bandh, literally meaning “waist band,” this wide, pleated sash was traditionally worn around the waist with single-breasted dinner jackets or tuxedos during the British era.

  • 2 months ago | gqindia.com | Ojas Kolvankar |Saloni Dhruv

    A pair of sunglasses isn’t just for shielding your eyes: it’s a statement, a mood, and, an essential part of your "brat summer" aesthetic. Whether you’re lounging by the pool or showing up at a lunch meeting, invest in a pair of sunglasses that do more than just block the sun. Aviators and wayfarers are an eternal classic, but if you’re open to being more adventurous, geometric frames and tinted lenses are stealing the spotlight.

  • Jan 16, 2025 | gqindia.com | Saloni Dhruv

    Back in 2019, a pair of Nike "Moon Shoes" (from 1972) set the bar for sneaker auctions when they sold for $437,500 at Sotheby's in New York. That sale didn’t just make history—it kicked off a trend of record-breaking auctions for iconic kicks, proving that rare sneakers can fetch jaw-dropping prices.

  • Jan 15, 2025 | gqindia.com | Saloni Dhruv

    Ginger, the spicy all-star of the plant family that brought us cardamom and turmeric, owes its zesty aroma to gingerols. The name "ginger" has quite the journey, starting from the Sanskrit srngaveram (meaning “horn root,” thanks to its how it looks), winding through Middle English as gingivere, and landing on our spice racks. For over 5,000 years, Indians and Chinese have been cultivating this powerhouse as a medicinal cure-all.

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