Best Rain & Rainbow ethnic dresses and kurtas to check out: If your wardrobe needs colour that feels wearable (not costume-y), Rain & Rainbow is a satisfying place to browse—lots of prints, easy silhouettes, and pieces that photograph well without trying too hard. Right to Fashion 2026 is a good excuse to pick the kind of ethnic staples you’ll actually repeat—at-home pujas, office ethnic days, and weekend lunches.
Myntra Right to Fashion 2026: 5 Rain & Rainbow ethnic styles to consider
These Rain & Rainbow ethnic dresses and kurtas have been curated from Myntra’s Rain & Rainbow listings, including kurta, kurta-set, and ethnic dress categories so you can compare prints and silhouettes in one scroll.
These five Rain & Rainbow pieces lean into breathable cotton and easy silhouettes, but they’re not interchangeable: two are everyday kurtis, two are cotton dresses meant to stand alone, and one is a full kurta set that does the “complete outfit” work upfront. The smartest way to use them is to treat each as a different kind of plan—errands, office-casual, summer day-out, and “need-to-look-put-together-fast.”

The blue ethnic motifs printed pure cotton kurti is the uncomplicated daily option: A-line shape, ethnic print, and pure cotton make it feel light and wearable in warm weather. The round/closed neckline and three-quarter sleeves keep it practical for regular use, especially when paired with straight pants or leggings that don’t compete with the print. The only downside is that lighter cotton prints can crease quickly, so it benefits from quick steaming if it’s being styled for work rather than home errands.

The maroon and black ethnic motifs printed pure cotton kurti plays the same “easy cotton” role but looks naturally more grounded because of the deeper palette and keyhole neckline. This is the kind of colour story that can handle repeated wear and still look intentional, especially with black bottoms and minimal accessories. A small con is that darker shades can show lint more easily, so it’s worth keeping fabric care simple and consistent.

The ethnic motifs printed fit-and-flare ethnic dress (beige/yellow in the brief) is a one-and-done outfit built for movement, with a tiered Anarkali-style flare and zari detail adding a slightly dressed-up note. It’s useful on days when styling time is low, because the silhouette itself reads complete without needing layering. The trade-off with tiered, flared dresses is volume: they photograph well and feel airy, but can feel “too much fabric” for cramped commutes or very humid afternoons.

The shoulder-strapped floral printed fit-and-flare pure cotton midi dress is the most summer-forward piece here, mainly because the sleeveless, strap-based neckline makes it lighter and more open than the kurtis. It’s also the easiest to dress down with flats or up with a light layer (a shirt worn open, a denim jacket) without fighting the print. The con is coverage: shoulder-strap dresses may need an extra layer for office settings or sun-heavy days, depending on comfort.

The ethnic motifs printed Chanderi cotton kurta with trousers and dupatta is the “ready outfit” option: straight printed kurta, solid trousers, and a printed dupatta, with sequinned detail called out in the set description. Chanderi cotton on top typically reads slightly more occasion-leaning than everyday cotton, so it suits gatherings, dinners, or a more polished day function without feeling heavy. The downside is maintenance and coordination—three pieces mean more care and storage, but also less last-minute decision-making.
