Conversation with Vanya Sundari

Hands all over Instagram, protected by the sharp and dreamy jewelry, website soon to come and DM’s to purchase. Home, love and protection are some of the few topics we chat about in our convo. You need to read our conversation with the wonderful Vanya Sundari, to figure out who's behind these silver pieces. Stay curious!




Been craving a trip to india, so these are all from my last trip in dec/jan of 2022/23



This editable transcript was computer generated and might contain errors. People can also change the text after it was created.

Attendees
Divijah Rajendra, Nanna Svane, Vanya Sundari



Nanna Svane: There we go. Hello.

Vanya Sundari: Sorry, I was running home because I was like, my God. I thought it was in an hour.

Nanna Svane: Vanya sorry, that was me earlier. Think I made the invitation to both of you when I was in London. And I thought I made it at 10 AM in New York time and then I opened it now. I think I made it and then my computer updated for a very very long time after I arrived in Milan and I'm like, great. It's another time zone. Sorry that you have to run home.

Vanya Sundari: No, no, it's totally fine. I was just grabbing coffee. 

Divijah Rajendra: I didn't even know.

Vanya Sundari: I know I was like

Divijah Rajendra: So we’re so happy you can make it with this short little notice here.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah.

Divijah Rajendra: Happy to have you here.

Vanya Sundari: Thank you.

Nanna Svane: Amazing, and Divijah. Maybe you want to, like Vanya, you and I we know each other.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, exactly.

Nanna Svane: But Divijah is my very good friend and the other founder us2u.

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah, so nice to meet you, I'm Divijah and together with Nanna we're doing this platform where we talk to friends, and we talk to strangers, talk about their work and just people we find super inspiring and have a conversation about anything we want to put on the table and anything we want to ask you about, but you can also vice versa ask us and give us a lot of thoughts and inspiration the other way around.

Vanya Sundari: cool I was like, it's like an online magazine?

Nanna Svane: It's such a hard question. It's a journey! Thank you Vanya, for joining us. How are you?

Vanya Sundari: I'm good. You're coming next weekend right? To New York.

Nanna Svanes: I'm coming on Wednesday!

Vanya Sundari: That's so exciting. And then you're here till Friday?

Nanna Svane: Yeah, I'm doing the store takeover on Friday, and then I'm leaving again on Saturday.

Vanya Sundari: Wow. That's short!

Nanna Svane: It is very quick and it's like I wish I could stay a little bit longer. But It's only those days I'm really required and it's not possible for me to prolong. So that's how it is. I'll make the best out of it. I'll probably see you?

Vanya Sundari: Yes, I would love to, maybe like Wednesday or…

Nanna Svane: Yeah…

Vanya Sundari: Thursday? Because Friday is that showroom that I was talking about.

Nanna Svane: exactly. I really want to drop by.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah. a few friends of mine,…

Divijah Rajendra: What is this? Your showroom?

Vanya Sundari: they sell designer vintage clothing and they just started renting out this showroom space on West 30th. So they're trying to make a more permanent space, because in the past it's been online and then pop-up throughout the year. But they were like the first people I sold a piece of jewelry with.

Divijah Rajendra: mmm

Vanya Sundari: They asked me to be their first visiting artist, so they're trying to curate designers.So I think this curation is all Issey and Pleats and then pair it with a visiting artist. So I guess me for next month.

Divijah Rajendra: That's fun.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, which will be cool, to be in a place like a brick and mortar place in New York by myself next month..

Divijah Rajendra: What's the name of this showroom? Does it have any specific name to it?

Vanya Sundari: The girls brand is 258PM salon. https://258pmsalon.com/. Wait, I can send it in this chat.

Nanna Svane: Yes, let's see it.

Vanya Sundari: I’ll send it in the chat. Yeah, they curate really fun stuff that.. Let me see. But yeah, that'll be exciting. so this weekend is kind of crazy…

Divijah Rajendra: awesome

Vanya Sundari: Because I've been doing all this stuff for it.

Nanna Svane: Wow. That's a cute website.

Divijah Rajendra: I love this little card game.

Vanya Sundari: I know. It's so cute.

Nanna Svane: It's very fun. I'm gonna dive into that after this conversation. Where in New York do you live?

Vanya Sundari: I live downtown in Chinatown, Little Italy area. Yeah. Yeah, so I live downtown in a very small shoe box size apartment.

Divijah Rajendra: But the placement is amazing? It's a great area.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, It’s great. Totally!

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah. How is living in New York?

Vanya Sundari: Have you lived here before?

Divijah Rajendra: No. Right now I'm in Copenhagen. But New York is like a dream,…

Vanya Sundari: Is that to you guys?

Divijah Rajendra: But it's also a nightmare.

Vanya Sundari: I was gonna say New York is a dream and a nightmare. Yeah. I don't know. It's only been three years. I haven't really been living here that long. And it's like my God.

Divijah Rajendra: But - cutie…!

Nanna Svane: Hello kitty.

Divijah Rajendra: Who's this? What's the name of this cat? So cute?

Vanya Sundari: his name is blue.

Divijah Rajendra: blue

Nanna Svane: Blue! hi blue.

Vanya Sundari: He's probably the meanest cat you'll ever meet in your life.

Divijah Rajendra: I mean, I have a cat fear to be honest. I really think cats are mean and…

Nanna Svane: me too.

Vanya Sundari: No. He's unbelievably mean, haha.

Divijah Rajendra: But right now really cute though. 

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, but right now, yeah. He is very symmetrical.

Nanna Svane: He’s very beautiful.

Vanya Sundari: Cute, when I found whatever when the foster mom found him. He had two broken Paws. And so when I went to see him, he was into casts and he was like (mimicking). It was really cute but really sad.

Divijah Rajendra: No!

Vanya Sundari: It's very funny. So to answer your question, living in New York is, I don't know. A love-hate relationship, but I don't know…

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah. no,…

Vanya Sundari: Where I would live in the US so I don't know.

Divijah Rajendra: But you always lived in the US?

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, other than during school. I studied in Copenhagen for a little bit and then Sydney. But otherwise I've only lived in the US, yes.

Divijah Rajendra: Where in Copenhagen did you study?

Vanya Sundari: It was just like a summer program in graphic design and I was staying in Vesterbro and I don't know where we had classes. It was mostly taught out of Pratt like the New York school. But I traveled to Stockholm and…

Divijah Rajendra: right

Vanya Sundari: to Helsinki and yeah, we lived in Copenhagen. Yeah, it was great.

Divijah Rajendra: How did you find Copenhagen? nice?

Vanya Sundari: I really loved it and I've been with my family before.

Nanna Svane: good!

Vanya Sundari: How do you feel about living there?

Divijah Rajendra: I think I feel really comfortable being in Copenhagen now. I've been living here for a while. Seven, eight years something like that. So now Copenhagen for sure for me feels like home. I have dreams about going to London or New York and staying there for maybe a year or two, but Copenhagen to me is just home.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, that's home at that point.

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah, but it's kind of crazy. I think it's kind of early to feel like you found a place.

Vanya Sundari: I feel like in a lot of ways New York is home. Even though I like to be down about it. it's So special like I, and…

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah.

Vanya Sundari: I'm not gonna be here forever, but I'm allowed to shut up.

Nanna Svane: Here, I don't know..

Divijah Rajendra: I think

Nanna Svane:  I'm just thinking about it because I'm also from Copenhagen and living in Milan right now and

Vanya Sundari: Did you and Divijah meet in Copenhagen?

Nanna Svane: Yeah. yeah, we worked together in Copenhagen for Four years.

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah, four years, I think. Yeah.

Nanna Svane: Yeah at the same agency and then both of us departed, but right when we departed we agreed on doing a project together and that's us2u. So getting us all together and I moved to Milan and even though I'm like, I'm home. This is not home. It's really interesting. I've been here for two years now. I don't know why it's just Maybe I think it's also because I'm traveling so much like I'm barely here. I'm here three days a month or…

Divijah Rajendra: And yeah.

Nanna Svane: something. so I don't know. Home for me is not physical.

Vanya Sundari: That's interesting. That way this is the longest I've ever been in a place, even in an apartment.

Divijah Rajendra: Then what?

Vanya Sundari: I've never signed a year lease until New York. And it was so scary to me. I was terrified and now I've been in this apartment for almost three years and…

Nanna Svane: Yeah.

Vanya Sundari: I'm like, my God. Part of me is feeling really antsy. what we talked about in Milan. I was like, I need to leave for a second because it's starting to feel like a lot. But yeah,…

Nanna Svane: It's interesting.

Vanya Sundari: I don't know.

Nanna Svane: If you could describe your childhood home in three words, what would it be? And where is it?

Vanya Sundari: My childhood home. Here's your question!

Nanna Svane: Diving into it.

Vanya Sundari: Diving into it, my childhood home was outside of Atlanta. So in the South and in three words probably safe, warm and playful. I feel like I just had a nice childhood. My parents are like my best friends. And yeah, I don't know, it was a really good place to grow up. I feel like

Nanna Svane: That's very lucky and lovely. That's a very lovely way of describing a childhood home safe loving and playful like that's the goal I guess.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, it was so warm like I yeah.

Divijah Rajendra: Do you miss home?

Vanya Sundari: Do I miss home? yeah, I miss my family and if my family was here like what you were saying about home not being a physical place, I think. I probably would miss. home less but yeah, I don't know I miss.

Divijah Rajendra: They're still outside of Atlanta? Yeah.

Vanya Sundari: yeah, they're still outside of Atlanta, but my sister just moved to New York. 

Divijah Rajendra: That's nice.

Nanna Svane: Divijah, what about you? How would you describe your childhood home in three words?

Divijah Rajendra: I think... I really do not like my childhood city.  It's in Jylland, the other side of Copenhagen.. It was a small town. It was slightly racist. I mean home is also the house you're in. I'm working with this feeling of dislocation in my works. So I think location is part of one of my words and the last one would be maybe, food. I associate my childhood home a lot with food and… my mom's food especially and that's the one thing that I absolutely love about going back home. It's getting my mom's food again, like her spicy shrimps and rice. It's just my favorite.


 “I miss my mom's cooking so much.”

Vanya Sundari: That's true. I miss my mom's cooking so much.

Divijah Rajendra: I know I haven't been learning how to cook these meals. So it's also a bit like I need to learn how to do this. If I cannot get it anymore for whatever reason, it is gonna be critical, so I need to start with learning how to cook these meals myself.

Vanya Sundari: It is critical. I don't know where to get good South Indian food in New York even like, there's really not that many places.

Divijah Rajendra: Nothing that tastes your mom's way of doing it's just like it's so special that's a little something something and that's also why I think I can never learn how to do this. She cannot teach me how to do this, which is the actual problem because she doesn't know what she puts into it. It's just like I just do a little bit and…

Nanna Svane: And I'm really thinking…

Divijah Rajendra: ... a little bit. Like what do you mean? How much? A spoon, two or three and she's like: “I don't know I go with it and taste it.”

Nanna Svane: When you answer the question Divijah, you answered it very location oriented.

Divijah Rajendra: How about you Nana? What are three words: childhood home for you?

Nanna Svane: turbulent. I think those three words is a good mixture of all of it love and trauma all the way through. My connection. I'm breaking up.

Vanya Sundari: I know it's like

Nanna Svane: I'm stressing out. Yeah, I'm sorry about that.

Divijah Rajendra: Turbulent yeah. I think Nanna's breaking up a bit like the connection is not super great, but Okay. Floating in and out. But Vanya you were talking about you just grabbing a coffee before getting into this conversation, and lately I've been having a lot of talks with friends about daily routines from what is the first thing you do when you wake up and till you go to bed? Could you talk a bit about your routine?

Vanya Sundari: It's funny because in 2020 I was so interested in everyone's routines with lockdown. How people in really small spaces had routines to keep their mind straight. Or I look at my grandparents and I'm like, they have really strict routines that helped them get through a lot.

Nanna Svane: Okay, okay. Okay.

Vanya Sundari: but then I am comically so bad it's definitely unlikely anything ever stays the same one day to the next. Which is so sad.

Nanna Svane: I think I'm back. 

Vanya Sundari: The come back! That's a little bit. I work at a design agency. So during the week. I feel like before I go to work, lately, I've been going up to the Diamond District to get materials and there's this woman that works at the store that I buy materials from that I've grown very fond of and I think she's grown really fond of me.

Nanna Svane: That's so cute.

Vanya Sundari: It's really funny. I feel like she sees my work probably more often than my own friends because I bring in new stuff to show her… what I'm doing. Which is really cute so, I go buy whatever. I need to buy Because I'm so bad at making lists. I feel like I go there way more than I should..

Vanya Sundari: And then go to work until probably sixish. And then on an Ideal day get to the studio for a few hours and then maybe meet a friend for dinner or like a drink or something. Then come home to my cat.

Divijah Rajendra: That's amazing. So you kind of go to get materials every day

Vanya Sundari: No, I would say maybe twice a week.. That's what a day might look like and then on the weekends, lately, I've been trying to be really good about getting to my studio by 9:30-10. And stay till maybe seven or eight. Yeah, which has been really nice.

Nanna Svane: wow.


“I feel like it's been mentally really good to just dedicate that time to doing things with my hands and being off my phone.”

Vanya Sundari: I feel like it's been mentally really good to just dedicate that time to doing things with my hands and being off my phone.

Divijah Rajendra: What does your daily routine look like Nanna?

Nanna Svane: yeah.

Divijah Rajendra: I know you are morning person. You're like an early bird kind of girl.

Vanya Sundari: I love mornings.

Nanna Svane: I am a huge morning person. I'm very obsessed with routine because I'm lacking or I really want a stable routine, but I'm not able to, because I'm never at one place more than, I don't know, three days at a time. So my routine is always something I need to be able to bring. So it can't be something that's determined in my house. And, so I'm a big smoker, even though morning routines are obviously often for people about health, for me it's like, I wake up no matter where I am, even though if I'm traveling and I have a flight at six in the morning and I need to travel and I need to leave the apartment at 4. I would always get up to have a minimum 20 minutes where I just sit with a cup of coffee and smoke a cigarette before I leave my house. Always, like that's one thing, if it's like Beauty routines, I don't have anything..

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, exactly. I feel like that.'s Llike I don't have skin care or beauty routine.

Nanna Svane: Exactly, but one good friend the other day, who has a very beautiful face, and she was like, you have a very baby face too and I'm like, I know. I'm still getting ask my ID whenever I buy smokes which is**** crazy, And she told me to start using sunscreen??

Divijah Rajendra: Okay, Vanya your favourite musician right now? It can be from the past, the present or the future.

Vanya Padmanabhan: The future is a funny way to think. Who would make an amazing musician? Yeah.

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah.

Vanya Padmanabhan: Yeah, I was like who is my favorite musician right…

Nanna Svane: Yeah.

Vanya Sundari: Do you have one right now? I'm gonna think about this. I've been listening to the new Smerz songs. They are pretty good.

Nanna Svane: They're good.

Divijah Rajendra:  I want to pull up my playlist right now. The latest thing, I have put on…

Vanya Sundari: I know the latest thing I was listening to yesterday… 

Divijah Rajendra: What is it though?

Nanna Svane: Please tell us.

Vanya Sundari: I feel like in studio, I listened to a lot of Future. So that's…

Divijah Rajendra: Love that.

Vanya Sundari: what was last.

Divijah Rajendra: Have you been hearing all of these diss tracks going between Kendrick and Drake?

Vanya Sundari: I haven't listened. 

Nanna Svane: I mean

Divijah Rajendra: My partner's been talking about it all morning and been listening to these new Kendrick numbers. I thought they were kind of over it, but I guess not. I've been listening to the new Zsela song Fire Escape.

Vanya Sundari: It is a good one.

Nanna Svane: Nice.

Divijah Rajendra: I think this is a good vibe for me these days.

Vanya Sundari: It's a good song. I've never turned on the video on Spotify. That's cool.

Divijah Rajendra: What about you Nanna? What's on your top?

Nanna Svane: My God, I just listened to Rihanna all day yesterday.

Divijah Rajendra: I also have this one. You should listen to this album.

Vanya Sundari: It's fun. What is that?

Divijah Rajendra: It's really good. Can you see it? It's called Stillhouse plants…

Nanna Svane: What is that? No.

Divijah Rajendra: “If I don't make it, I love you.” It's so good.

Nanna Svane: Still House Plants… My God, that's such a cute title. Vanya, we also want to speak to you a little bit about the jewellery and I think it's really fun because we're wearing the same ring right now. 

Divijah Rajendra: Let me see. Very pretty!

Nanna Svane: So cute and also cute little introduction. I got to know you…

Divijah Rajendra: I love this cat presence going on in the background.

Vanya Sundari: He's never done this before.

Divijah Rajendra: This is so funny.

Vanya Sundari: I'm dead.

Nanna Svane: I love this. So what is he doing?

Vanya Sundari: I don't know. My god, Blue… 

Nanna Svane: We met each other two years ago, a friend in common set us up because you needed a place in Milan doing Salone. I rented my apartment to you and a bunch of your friends. I remember checking your Instagram profile and I was like This cool girl, like what the f*** . I am obsessed with your pieces but this particular ring. I was just like, it's too much, I need this one.

Vanya Sundari: <3

Nanna Svane: I wrote to you. No, I'm not making that one, you said. 

Vanya Sundari: At the time I had just never sold anything to anyone.

Divijah Rajendra: Do you have any nerdy facts about creating your jewelry because then it sounds like it's more actually in the craftsmanship that the ring is being developed. You have any particular ways of crafting your pieces?

Vanya Sundari: I mean, I think metal is so cool.  I think it's such a special medium and material because it feels forever recyclable. Making is the special part about jewelry. The actual metal smithing process, which I'm not very precise about and it’s special to see goldsmiths that are incredibly precise in their work and…

Vanya Sundari: their craft whereas I don't think I could ever call myself a jeweler, because it's more just like I'm messing around with materials and reading it more like sculpture.

Nanna Svane: You were saying that the rings or The Jewellery are actually more functioning as sculptures?.

Vanya Sundari: Right jewelry, as armor is interesting or it’s just like an extension of the body versus as an accessory.

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah, because I was looking at this piece. I'm obsessed with this piece. Can you see it? The light is kind of bad… The extension of the ear coming out, as they’re long nails on an ear. was kind of the things I was seeing.

Vanya Sundari: yeah!

Divijah Rajendra: It feels like that bodily extension - I found that so amazing.

Nanna Svane: Yeah, it's so beautiful.


“I think I just feel like I wear jewellery is armour, it feels protective and even with that piece like, it looks kind of dangerous. I feel like there's something protective to the wearer and a little bit scary to The Observer.”

Vanya Sundari: I think I just feel like I wear jewellery as armour, it feels protective and even with that piece like, it looks kind of dangerous. I feel like there's something protective to the wearer and a little bit scary to The Observer.

Nanna Svane: It's so interesting to look at it as an armour.

Vanya Sundari: I don't feel myself, like I wear these, here wait I can take it. I wear these anklets every day like both my ankles and I feel like it keeps me really grounded and if I don't wear it. I feel really vulnerable. And there's something about Metal.

Nanna Svane: They're so beautiful. Huge love. How do you wear jewellery Divijah?

Divijah Rajendra: It’s such a cultural thing for me, my parents and they always push me to wear earrings. It's like, you have to or I'm not like a girl or something. Now I never ever earrings. I think it's like a rebellious approach to very traditional cultural aspects of my family. I have one necklace and then I have these rings. This is my engagement ring from my partner. And then this is and…

Vanya Sundari: Congratulations.

Divijah Rajendra: then I have this one which is the one he gave me at my birthday the first year we were together. Can you hear the sound? I can't hear the sound?

Vanya Sundari: my God, you attached to my headphones

Divijah Rajendra: No, you were saying?

Vanya Sundari: Yeah. When I'm wearing jewellery, it helps me take up physical space. Which is cool yeah,… it's really empowering.

Nanna Svane: It's so much an armour like as you said. Are you reading anything right now?

Vanya Sundari: Glass, Irony, and God by Anne Carson. This poetry book.

Nanna Svane: Very cute. I'm reading this one; A picture of Cookie Mueller. Vanya. Do you make your outfit from your jewellery? Or do you choose the jewellery from the outfit? 

Vanya Sundari:: I feel like at this point my closet is almost like uniform so it feels like a lot of my pieces feel interchangeable with what I'm wearing but maybe my jewelry is chosen based more on like environment or the sense of what I'm about to go do. And how much protection I need?

Divijah Rajendra: Jeans, overrated or underrated?

Vanya Sundari: I do wear jeans, but I think they're perfectly rated.

Divijah Rajendra: Sometimes people can be like, jeans are the one thing that you would need in your closet.

Vanya Sundari:: I know ultimate no.

Divijah Rajendra: No, that's a no.

Vanya Sundari: I wouldn't say it would be like a staple to my wardrobe or something. I can live without denim. 

Divijah Rajendra: And I can see Nanna's face being like….

Vanya Sundari:: Do you love?

Nanna Svane:  I've been wearing very old three different types of jeans. APC’s old denim and Levis.  I'm also wearing denim now like it's 100% like my uniform I think. These has a big rip in the ass.

VVanya Sundari: You look hot, what about you Divijah?

Divijah Rajendra: I really do love that, Nanna. Black pair of baggy jeans! Jeans is really a good piece in my wardrobe. I usually wear pants. I have one or two skirts that I sometimes wear during summer. But I don't know. 

Vanya Sundari: I guess that's why I'm in my ideal world. I'm in a place. That's so warm that I'm not wearing denim!

Divijah Rajendra: No, but that's the one thing - I went to Sri Lanka last year and they wore denim no matter what degrees it is and I'm amazed. I'm like how do people function in this heat within them up? 

Nanna Svane: Yeah! Can you tell us of one to three different handcraft people, that you admire? It can also be from the past. 

Vanya Sundari: God, that makes the question way harder.

Nanna Svane: I know but also much more interesting. The references must be crazy though.

Vanya Sundari: That's true. There's this Parisian girl or I think she's based there, who's doing a show here in New York right now. I'm really excited to go see it and her name is Zoe Mohm. Have You Seen Her pieces before?

Nanna Svane: I don't think so.

Vanya Sundari: They're so playful and… like in an ethereal way.

Nanna Svane: Or wait did I maybe see this on a story the other day?

Vanya Sundari: Yeah! They're so beautiful. 

Divijah Rajendra: It's quite figurative!

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, it's beautiful. And then, my God, I'm obsessed with this London Jeweler Gala Colivet Dennison. Have you seen her work? My God..

Nanna Svane: No, no. Okay.

Divijah Rajendra: again Yes.

Nanna Svane: Can you please link these people in the chat?

Vanya Sundari: yeah. she's probably one of my favorite jewelry designers ever. Her work is so sculptural. It's very chic. Wow.

Divijah Rajendra: Wow.

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, I find her work really really stunning. Actually this other girl or woman. (Lucie Gledhill) I think is also from London. Let me send this. She makes these chains and I feel like she's more of who I might say is a Goldsmith. But her work is kind of unbelievable.

Vanya Sundari:it's beautiful. Yeah, I'm kind of In awe by how precise her work is it?

Divijah Rajendra: very beautifully crafted

Vanya Sundari: those are some of my jewelry crushes probably.

Divijah Rajendra: Thank you so much for sharing. Okay, to wrap it up. We have one last question. So what from the past will you bring into the future?

Vanya Sundari: I was like, maybe all of my Memories, I'm such a nostalgic person and…

Nanna Svane: <3

Vanya Sundari: Yeah, I feel like I would be super lost without them. What would you bring?

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah. What about you Nanna from the past? Will you bring in some future?

Nanna Svane: Love, I would say.

Divijah Rajendra: Im gonna say the same. I think this conversation has been so wonderful. I really love the way that you spoke about jewellery in a way that I've never spoken about jewellery before. Such a bodily way. I really appreciate that. So thank you so much Vanya.

Vanya Sundari: Thank you for having me. And it was nice to meet you!

Divijah Rajendra: Yeah, nice to meet you too. I think I’ll come to New York very soon. You are going next week, Nanna?

Nanna Svane: Yup. And I'll see you next week Vanya!

Vanya Sundari: Yes, I'm so excited!

Nanna Svane: And thank you Blue for participating also.

Vanya Sundari: My God.

Nanna Svane: He's up in the closet again.

Vanya Sundari: That was a whole show.

Divijah Rajendra: Thank you so much. We'll be in touch.

Vanya Sundari: Yes. Yes.

Nanna Svane: Thank you. Keep in touch.

Vanya Sundari: My goodness! Before you go. I'm gonna take a little photo of you guys.

Nanna Svane: Cute.

Divijah Rajendra: Love - thank you so much Vanya. Bye.

Nanna Svane: See you!

Vanya Sundari: Yes definitely!

Conversation ended after 01:44:03 👋


Some links Vanya wanted to share:

 



Impressions of Vanya.
 Need more! Read here!



How tall are you?
5’6”

Hair up or down? 
up almost always

Spring is...?
the season of false summer

What is a goddess to you? 
they’ll roll their eyes, but my besties are goddesses to me

Hot drinks or cold drinks? 
hot. i’m always cold

Jeans, over or underrated? 
ambivalent

Walking, biking or public transport? 
walking.. i’m convinced i’m basically as fast on foot as i would be on a bike. obviously not true

NYC is...? 
a machine heart

Describe Rosalia in 3 words.. 
hot and strong

Can silver die? 
i hope she lives forever

If you were a colour, you would be.. 
i love pink and orange. i’m not sure i’m either, but a girl can dream!

Favourite art piece.. 
my grandmother made a pretty large batik in the 70s that’s sitting at my parent’s house. it’s a scene from the Mahabharata. it’s very special

In a car, driving at night, what song would you put on? 
i’m rolling the dice and shuffling my entire library