Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: DINING is more than taste, it’s about atmosphere, memory, and emotion. For Raju Omlet, design isn’t an afterthought—it’s part of the brand. Its outlets feature quirky décor: antique photo frames hung at odd angles, reclaimed railway sleeper planks for signage, and odd-angle walls that evoke India’s old cafés. In one Sharjah outlet, over 110 frames (one nearly 100-year-old) line the walls.
The real jump, however, came after the brand’s co-founder visited Mumbai’s Pali Bhavan, following the Crown Prince’s visit to India. Inspired by its vintage ambience, the brand hired designer Tejal Mathur to apply a ‘sepiatoned photo-album’ effect to Raju Omlet’s upcoming outlets in Abu Dhabi and Sharjah. The goal was to create spaces that feel familiar yet new, rooted in memory but built for today.
In a region awash with fast-food chains, global cafés and Michelin lights, Raju Omlet’s interiors anchor its simple menu in an emotional experience. It signals that here, you’re not just eating an omelette – you’re stepping into a story.
The design turns eggs and chai into an outing. It becomes about belonging, nostalgia and repeat habit – a smart branding move in an era where ambience often sells as much as the food.































