Debonair Magazine India Models Today

Take (28, Lakme Fashion Week regular, face of a major luxury watch brand). He isn't classically “pretty.” His nose has a bump from a college rugby accident. His walk is a little lazy, a little dangerous. “I was rejected seven times because my ‘look wasn’t clean,’” he tells us over black coffee at a Bandra studio. “Then a European designer saw my test shots and said, ‘Finally, a man who looks like he’s lived.’”

Hailing from the smaller cities—Lucknow, Nagpur, Coimbatore—this model brings a physicality that gym-built Bombay boys can’t fake. Broad jaw, thick neck, hands that look like they’ve worked. He’s the face of ‘real power’ athleisure and homegrown whisky. Debonair Magazine India Models

Debonair – For men who understand that style is a weapon. Load it. Take (28, Lakme Fashion Week regular, face of

Think tailored linen, poetry on Instagram, and a skincare routine that puts most celebrities to shame. He walks for Rajesh Pratap Singh one day and shoots a viral reel about stoic philosophy the next. He’s intelligent, sensitive, and sharp as a blade. “I was rejected seven times because my ‘look

The successful ones have diversified. They run production houses, clothing lines, or curated fitness apps. The model who only models is a dying breed. As we wrap up our editorial boardroom session—single malt in hand, contact sheets spread across the table—one truth emerges. A great Indian male model is not a clothes hanger. He is a mirror to the modern Indian man: ambitious, vulnerable, strong, and stylish without trying too hard.

NRIs returning home, or models with mixed heritage. They carry a passport full of stamps and a walk that merges New York urgency with Delhi swagger. They dominate e-commerce and international catalogues.