About Us

The Founder

Amala Pendse

The average men's tee in 2026 weighs 18% less than it did in 1995.
Costs 340% more. Lasts eight months.

The industry calls this progress. It is not progress. It is a business model constructed on the assumption that you won't notice — and thirty years of evidence confirming they were correct. Venhoma exists because that assumption deserved to be challenged with the same precision it was built. We engineer essentials for the male frame the industry has been approximating, poorly, since before most of our customers were born. Structured fit. 220 GSM compact cotton. Finished inside with the same intention as outside. Built to last considerably longer than the replacement cycle that funds everyone else.We started with a micro batch and one conviction: a single thing done without compromise is worth more than a thousand things done inadequately. That position has not changed. It will not.The standard will not decline here. It will compound. Every batch better than the last. Every year, the floor becomes the ceiling.

Engineered to flatter. Built to last. Worn with ease.

Our Services

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Quality

Quality is the most abused word in the menswear industry. It has been deployed to justify price points, to dress up mediocrity, and to describe garments that fail at the seam within the season they were sold. We do not use it carelessly here. At Venhoma, quality is not a claim. It is a construction specification that can be read, verified, and felt within three seconds of handling the garment. It is the 220 GSM compact ring-spun cotton that has visible weight and falls with gravity rather than finding the nearest surface to cling to. It is the 4-thread overlock side seam that holds through years of wear without apology. It is the mother of pearl button whose organic surface absorbs light rather than catching it — the detail nobody compliments because nobody can name it, but everybody registers. We publish our manufacturing cost. We name our factory. We invite scrutiny because the garment survives it. The standard will not decline here. Every batch is built to be measurably better than the last. Quality, at Venhoma, is not a destination. It is a direction — and we have chosen it

COMFORT

Comfort is not softness. It is not the first five minutes of wearing something new. It is what remains after the novelty has passed — the tee you reach for on the morning of something important because you know, without thinking about it, that it will not ask anything of you. The most comfortable garment is the one you forget you are wearing. This sounds obvious. It is, in practice, extraordinarily rare. Most men conduct a low-grade negotiation with their clothes every day — adjusting the front that rides up, managing the collar that has lost its shape, compensating for the shoulder seam that sits behind the tip. These are not large inconveniences. They are small, constant, invisible taxes on the attention of a man who has considerably more important things to spend it on. Venhoma is engineered to end that negotiation. The cotton has the weight to fall clean. The structure holds through a full day. The fit was tested on real bodies in real conditions until the adjustments stopped entirely. When the clothes finally work, the man is free to get on with everything else. That freedom is what comfort actually means. It was always the brief.

FIT

The Indian male body is not a problem to be solved. It is a frame to be honoured — and it has been waiting, for rather longer than is acceptable, for clothes that honour it correctly. Standard ready-to-wear is graded on Western ease values. The chest-to-waist drop assumed by most sizing systems does not reflect the body most Indian men carry at 33, at 40, at 48. The shoulder width assumed by most pattern systems does not account for the broader frame that is the norm here, not the exception. The result — L fighting the belly, XL bagging at the shoulder, the man concluding that the difficulty lies with him — is one of the more persistent frauds the industry has perpetrated, quietly, over several decades. Venhoma's fit is graded for the frame that actually exists. The shoulder seam sits at the shoulder tip, not behind it. The front panel carries slightly more ease than the back, because the belly is on the front and the fabric should acknowledge this without advertising it. The hem is engineered to stay flat when a man sits, leans, moves through a full day without once reaching down to correct it. The fit does not make a man look like someone else. It makes him look, with complete precision, like himself — composed, present, and entirely at ease in his own frame. That is, if one is being direct about it, the only thing a well-fitted garment was ever supposed to do.

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