Inside the quiet Mumbai operation that has shot for Netflix, Amazon, Vogue, Gucci, and the Taj Mahal – and still somehow remains India’s best kept creative secret
There is a photograph somewhere in India right now.
It might be on the cover of a magazine you read last month. It might be the campaign image that made you stop scrolling and look twice at a luxury brand. It might be a scene from an OTT show that felt cinematic in a way you couldn’t quite explain.
Somewhere behind that image – behind the lighting, the talent, and the composition – is a set. A physical world that was either found or, more often than the industry admits, entirely invented. The colours, textures, props, and structural elements were all designed and built before the talent arrived and the camera rolled.
Behind that set, with overwhelming probability, is a small, obsessive, fiercely talented team operating out of Mumbai under a name most people in the industry know but few outside it have ever heard – Studio Little Dumpling.
The Impossible Thing They Did. Twice.
If you want to understand what Studio Little Dumpling is, start here.
Falguni Shane Peacock – one of India’s most celebrated couture houses – wanted something that had never been done before: a full-scale fashion show and campaign shoot inside the Taj Mahal.
Not near it. Not inspired by it. Inside it.
The Taj Mahal is one of the world’s most protected monuments. The permissions alone would stop most production houses before the conversation properly began.
Studio Little Dumpling made it happen.
The production was executed with the precision and sensitivity that a location of that magnitude demands. Couture met one of the world’s most iconic backdrops, captured with the reverence and artistry the monument deserved.
Then they did it again.
When a studio tells you they make the impossible look easy, that claim usually dissolves under scrutiny. In Studio Little Dumpling’s case, it happens to be verifiable.
Built on Word of Mouth. Nothing Else.
Studio Little Dumpling was founded in 2017 by Niharika Singh and Praneet Arora, a husband-and-wife team who believed visual storytelling in India could be more considered, more crafted, and more culturally intelligent than what the market routinely produced.
They started without investors, without a marketing budget, and without a business development team.
Four years later, the studio has built a client roster that reads less like a portfolio and more like a directory of India’s most significant brands and platforms: Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Vogue, GQ, Cosmopolitan, Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, Gucci, Audi, Google Pay, CRED, Swiggy, Meta, Ogilvy, Dentsu, Havas, Taj Hotels, and JW Marriott, among many others.
Ninety-five percent of the business is repeat. Clients who came once and kept coming back.
In an industry where relationships are often built through access and connections, Studio Little Dumpling built theirs through the quality of what they produce.
The Invisible Architecture of Great Campaigns
Every great campaign image has a world inside it.
A set. An environment that was either discovered or carefully created from scratch.
This is production design – one of the most consistently undervalued crafts in the content industry.
Studio Little Dumpling has built its identity around this invisible but essential discipline.
The studio operates a fully in-house production design capability, taking creative briefs from concept to three-dimensional reality without relying on external vendors. Their inventory includes custom-built set pieces, structural elements, luxury and industrial props, furniture, fabrics, carpets, and soft furnishings accumulated across years of production.
They also create detailed 3D renders before a single piece of timber is cut, allowing clients to walk through environments digitally before they exist physically.
Design thinking, physical infrastructure, rendering technology, and end-to-end execution under one roof is a combination that remains genuinely rare in the Indian market.
More Than a Production House
The studio’s capabilities extend far beyond set design.
Their services span TVCs, DVCs, short films, branded documentaries, OTT promotional content, magazine editorials, product campaigns, corporate films, social media content, and branding solutions. They have executed productions across India as well as Thailand, the Maldives, and Singapore.
Alongside the studio, Niharika and Praneet also operate Little Monk Talent Management, a subsidiary representing directors, photographers, cinematographers, stylists, producers, hair and makeup artists, and AI visualisers.
The Inflection Point
India’s content economy is expanding at extraordinary speed. OTT platforms are producing at scale, D2C brands are investing heavily in premium visual storytelling, and luxury brands are finding an increasingly confident Indian voice.
Across all these sectors, the demand for high-quality, culturally intelligent production is growing faster than the supply of studios capable of delivering it consistently.
Studio Little Dumpling has been quietly building the infrastructure to meet that demand since 2017.
The foundation is built. The reputation is established. The capabilities are documented. What comes next is scale.
The studio is approaching the kind of inflection point that arrives only once in a company’s early life – the moment when a respected insider secret begins its transition into an industry institution.
That transition will be worth watching.
A Final Note
There is a particular kind of business that the market consistently undervalues until it can no longer afford to.
The kind that is too busy doing excellent work to spend time announcing it. The kind whose clients return not out of habit but out of genuine conviction that nobody else does it quite as well.
Studio Little Dumpling has spent four years being exactly that business.
The next chapter, by all indications, will be considerably louder.
Studio Little Dumpling is a Mumbai-based full-service media, content, art, and production studio operating across India and internationally, with productions spanning Thailand, the Maldives, and Singapore. Its subsidiary, Little Monk Talent Management, represents behind-the-camera talent across film, fashion, and digital content.










