This section is a Premium Vi exclusive interactive feature. Readers can click through Sharma's daily routine—from her 5:30 AM Ayurvedic ritual to her night-time skincare layering technique. It also includes a playlist she curated for the magazine (featuring everything from Lana Del Rey to traditional Rajasthani folk).
What does "premium" mean to Riya Sharma? It’s a question she fields often, usually while sitting front row at Paris Fashion Week.
"Premium isn't about a price tag," she says, leaning forward. "It’s about intention. A handmade kalamkari dupatta is premium because a human being spent weeks breathing life into it. A fast-fashion dress worn once is disposable. My lifestyle is about the curation of things that last—relationships, art, and stories."
This philosophy bleeds into her entertainment choices. Her latest production, The Silent Song, bypassed traditional streaming giants for a limited theatrical release followed by an exclusive community screening model. It was a risk that paid off, creating a buzz that algorithm-driven content rarely achieves. riya sharma hot uncut naari magazine premium vi
"It’s about the shared experience," Riya explains. "Entertainment today is so isolating. We watch alone, on our phones. I want to bring back the 'Naari' aspect—the gathering, the shared narrative, the collective gasp in a dark room. That is the ultimate luxury."
The Riya Sharma Full Naari Magazine Premium Vi release is strategically timed with the premiere of her new thriller series "Shadow Box" on a major streaming platform. The magazine feature includes:
This cross-pollination between lifestyle and entertainment is what makes the Premium Vi edition a cultural artifact rather than just a magazine issue. It treats entertainment as an extension of identity, not an escape from it. This section is a Premium Vi exclusive interactive feature
By The NAARI Editorial Desk
It is a humid Tuesday evening in Mumbai, but inside the sprawling, sun-drenched studio of Riya Sharma, the air is crisp and smells faintly of jasmine and old books. The city’s chaos feels miles away. This is the headquarters of AURA, the lifestyle brand that has single-handedly redefined what it means to be a modern Indian woman in the digital age.
Riya Sharma welcomes us in. She isn't draped in the heavy couture one might expect from the cover of Vogue; she is wearing a crisp white shirt, antique gold jhumkas, and linen trousers. She looks less like a celebrity and more like an architect—precisely because she is one. but inside the sprawling
In a world where "influencer" is often a dirty word associated with fleeting trends and filtered realities, Riya Sharma stands as a defiant anomaly. She is the anti-influencer; a curator of culture, a revivalist of forgotten Indian art forms, and the subject of NAARI Magazine’s Premium Lifestyle cover story this month.
Shot in Jaipur and Mumbai, the editorial fashion spread is a study in contrasts. Sharma wears everything from handloom silk sarees (styled with chunky silver jewelry) to structured blazers and cycling shorts. The Premium Vi exclusivity means readers get 4K downloadable wallpapers and a "Style Deconstruction" video where Sharma breaks down each look.
If you are still on the fence about downloading or purchasing the Riya Sharma full Naari Magazine premium VI lifestyle and entertainment edition, consider the following exclusive takeaways that are not available in the free preview: