Best floral printed kurtas to check out: A good floral kurta softens your everyday look, adding colour and also some pattern without ever feeling loud or fussy. It’s the kind of piece that slips easily into workdays, family get-togethers, and casual outings with the same ease.
Top 5 floral printed kurtas to consider on Myntra
These picks have been curated from Myntra to keep the focus on wearable prints, easy fits, and sale-friendly price points that still feel like smart additions to your wardrobe. The idea is to highlight options that feel fresh now but won’t look dated a few months down the line.
Print sits on cotton and rayon in different ways. Cotton keeps the surface drier and a little firmer through the seams, while rayon lets the pattern fall softer against the body; once side slits, hems, and sleeve lengths are fixed, the fabric starts deciding whether the kurta feels crisp, airy, or slightly fluid.
The usual trade-off is between ease and shape. Straight kurtas keep the line clean and practical for repeat wear, while an A-line cut opens up more movement through the lower half; short sleeves make a piece feel more casual and immediate, three-quarter sleeves give a little more structure without becoming heavy.
Straight cotton and everyday wear

The maroon-and-white Rimeline kurta, the yellow DEEPYOG APPAREL piece, and the beige-and-navy Pjyot by surhi style sit closest to the everyday cotton lane. All three are calf-length, regular in styling, and built around a straight silhouette, but they separate through neckline and surface treatment. Rimeline stays the calmest with pure cotton, a round neck, three-quarter sleeves, side slits, and a straight hem. It is the kind of kurta that depends on print and proportion rather than extra detail.

The DEEPYOG APPAREL kurta adds thread work to a yellow floral base and uses a V-neck with three-quarter sleeves, which gives it a slightly dressier face without leaving the daily-wear category. Pjyot by surhi also uses thread work, but the beige-and-navy palette and round neck make it feel more grounded and quieter. Same broad structure. Different mood.
A-line and softer drape

The black Chaukas kurta is the clearest contrast in the group. It uses viscose rayon instead of cotton, keeps the floral print, and shifts into an A-line shape with a flared hem and short sleeves. That alone changes how it moves — less vertical, more open through the lower body, softer around the frame.

Because of the V-neck and calf length, it still stays very wearable, but it reads less utilitarian than the straight cotton pieces. The rayon base should feel smoother and more fluid, which works well when someone wants a kurta that does not sit too stiffly.
Shirt-collar variation

The grey JEMCY kurta stands apart through the neckline. A shirt collar on a floral kurta changes the tone quickly — more shirt-dress logic, less conventional ethnic framing. It also uses short sleeves, a straight shape, and a shorter knee-length cut, so it feels brisker and more casual than the calf-length options.
That shorter length matters. It makes the piece look lighter and more day-ready, especially compared with the longer, three-quarter-sleeve kurtas. Clean line. Less ceremony.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which kurta feels most suited to daily wear? The Rimeline maroon-and-white cotton kurta.
Which one has the softest, most fluid drape? The Chaukas black A-line rayon kurta gets the nod here.
Which style looks the most different from the rest? The grey JEMCY shirt-collar kurta.
Which pieces include thread work detail? The yellow DEEPYOG APPAREL and beige-navy Pjyot by surhi kurtas.
