From Fitting Rooms to Tea Rooms: Prerness in Singapore
New Delhi [India], April 11: Some trips are planned. Others unfold like a well-composed aesthetic—intuitive, layered, and quietly indulgent. For @prerness (Prerrna Agarwal) , Singapore was the latter. She is a wellness entrepreneur and a curator of lifestyle and all things aesthetic. She loves to plan her travel itinerary from scratch and visits exclusive spots or stores. We can say she is a curator of hidden gems.
Seen through her lens, the city did not present itself as a checklist of tourist landmarks, but as a sequence of moments—stitched together by fabric, flavour, and feeling. “It felt less like a trip and more like stepping into a mood board,” she reflects.
Her day began, as many of her stories do, in a fitting room. As @Prerness recommends, two Asian brands that stood out and filled her suitcases. One was Love Bonito and another was Sans and Sans.
At Love Bonito, restraint was quickly abandoned. Rack after rack offered silhouettes that seemed not just flattering, but understanding. “These clothes are actually designed for Asian women,” she says, almost with relief. What stood out wasn’t just the design, but the quiet intelligence behind it—the way lengths fell correctly, cuts aligned with real proportions, and fabrics moved without resistance.
There was also a detail she couldn’t ignore, the practice of trying display pieces, only to be handed a fresh, untouched garment upon purchase. A small gesture, perhaps, but one that elevated the experience into something bordering on ritual. In that space, shopping shed its transactional nature. “I didn’t feel like I had to adjust to the outfit; the outfit adjusted to me,” she notes.
If Love Bonito was a polished, sunlit version of self, Sans & Sans introduced a different mood altogether. Here, the aesthetic softened into something quieter, more deliberate. The pieces did not announce themselves—they lingered. It was, as she describes it, “the kind of wardrobe that doesn’t scream for attention but holds it anyway.”
By the time she stepped out, what she carried was more than shopping bags—it was a series of identities, tried on and momentarily lived. “It didn’t feel like shopping; it felt like curating versions of myself,” she says.
Later, at Marina Bay Sands, the narrative shifted.
Just outside the TWG Tea Salon & Boutique, the visual drama of luxury retail—punctuated by the Louis Vuitton store’s striking collaboration with Yayoi Kusama—gave way to something softer. Prerrna said ,” The Louis Vuitton store was an absolute artistic celebration, and then I stepped out of it only to find myself drawn to the TWG cafe, followed by its own grand store like a fairy tale book”.
Inside TWG, time seemed to slow. Gold accents glowed under warm light, rows of intricate tea canisters lined the walls, and even the weight of the porcelain cups seemed intentional.
“It changes your pace,” she observes.
She chose the Golden Rose Tea—floral, delicate, and quietly indulgent. But it wasn’t the tea alone that lingered. A passing mention of her birthday was met not with spectacle, but with sincerity. A server, who shared Indian roots, returned with a small cheesecake—unannounced, unassuming, and deeply personal.
“No grand gesture, no performance—just thoughtful hospitality,” she recalls. In that moment, luxury revealed itself not as opulence, but as attention.
By evening, the city had already given her more than she had expected—but Singapore, it seemed, understood pacing better than most.
At VivoCity, she paused for what she calls “shopping recovery”—a foot massage at a spa. What followed was not indulgence, but restoration. “It was the kind where you forget what day it is,” she says. The experience was precise, immersive, almost meditative—the kind that resets not just the body, but the rhythm of the day.
She walked out lighter, not just in step, but in spirit.
Looking back, what stayed with her was not any single highlight, but the continuity between them—the way Singapore delivers luxury not through excess, but through calibration.
“Singapore does luxury differently,” she says. “It’s not loud or overwhelming—it’s in the details. In how a dress fits, in how your tea is served, in how someone remembers your birthday without making it a spectacle.”
And perhaps that is what defines her experience best.
It did not try too hard. It simply got everything right. Follow to know more https://instagram.com/prerness
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