
The Modern Jacket: Redefined with Power, Presence, and Sculptural Form
Ananya Goenka BagariaShare
We’ve all met the jacket.
Tailored. Sharp. Masculine in its roots. Worn for impact.
But what happens when you take that structure—and subvert it? When you reimagine the jacket not as a declaration, but as a dialogue?
At AGB, that’s exactly what we’ve done.
Our take on the modern jacket is less about authority and more about authorship. Less about command, more about presence. Rebuilt for the woman who leads on her own terms.
Let’s Talk Waistcoats
Because we didn’t just stop at jackets.
We began with waistcoats—those slim, buttoned layers of formality—and pulled them apart.

The Ivory Fold leans into architecture, not tradition. Sculptural waves shape the collar, making it feel more like a soft sculpture than a layer.

The Petal Lapel reinterprets a formal cut with a curved lapel framed in delicate floral embroidery. It’s subtle drama—a piece that elevates without asking for attention.
And Then There’s the Jacket…
Not just a jacket, but jackets that shapeshift.

The Pearl Column stays closest to the classic blazer—but turns the lapel into a story of its own. Hand-embellished with clustered pearls, it reframes the idea of adornment—structured but soft-spoken, rich in texture yet wearable.

The Ivory Unfold throws symmetry out the window. A draped, multidimensional silhouette with cascading layers, it’s built like movement captured in fabric. It has presence—but never shouts.

The Woven Crest borrows from capes, blazers, and a little ceremonial grandeur. Open at the front, geometric at the shoulders, and curved at the hem—this piece invites you in, then makes you look again.
So, What Does the Jacket Mean Today?
It means what you need it to mean.
Power is no longer about shoulder pads and straight lines. It’s about clothes that meet you where you are—and move with you wherever you’re going.
These are jackets you can wear with a denim skirt or cigarette pants, barefoot or in heels. They’re versatile, sculptural, unexpected. And they’re meant for women who don’t just step into rooms—they shape them.
So no, we haven’t just made jackets.
We’ve redefined them.