Standing between a printed lawn suit and an embroidered one is the most common decision in Pakistani summer shopping. Neither is “better” — they solve different problems. Here is how to choose in under a minute.

Printed lawn: the workhorse

Printed suits are lighter on the body and the wallet — at Pashmaal, from Rs. 3,800. No embroidery means nothing to snag, faster ironing, easier washing, and a suit you can wear to work, errands, and chai without thinking twice. If you are building an everyday rotation, prints win. Browse them in Casual and Luxury Lawn.

Embroidered lawn: the occasion piece

Embroidery adds structure and presence — a dense neckline panel, worked hems and cuffs, often a dressier dupatta. It photographs richer and reads “occasion” instantly: dawats, office events, Eid daytime. Expect Rs. 4,200–4,750 and slightly more care in washing. The dressiest pieces sit in our Festive Collection.

The one-minute decision

Wearing it more than once a week? Printed. Buying for an event or gift? Embroidered. Building a balanced summer wardrobe? Three prints to one embroidered is the ratio most Pakistani women actually live in. Every option in both camps is a fully stitched 3-piece suit, sizes S–XL.

Common questions

Which lasts longer, printed or embroidered lawn?

With proper care, both last years. Prints risk gradual fading with harsh washing; embroidery risks snags. Gentle, inside-out washing protects either.

Can embroidered lawn be worn daily?

Lighter butidar-style embroidery, yes. Dense neckline panels feel dressy for daily errands — most women save them for gatherings.

Which is better for Eid?

Embroidered for the day’s main event; printed for the second and third day. If you are buying one suit, embroidered earns the occasion.