Orange Chowk started with a simple frustration, creatives in India weren't being seen for what they truly do.
And over time, something shifted. They stopped seeing it themselves.
Creatives shaped culture once.
They still do. They just stopped believing it.
The ability to make people think, feel, build, remember... it's still theirs. It always was.
We're just here to help them see it again. The proof exists. We just keep bringing it to the creatives.
What pulled us to Comet is the belief behind it.
The belief that world-class products, brands, and culture can be built from here.
And that matters, especially now. Because many creatives still look outward before they look inward. Assuming the most ambitious ideas, brands, and opportunities exist somewhere else.
What Utkarsh and Dishant remind us is that every meaningful venture begins with belief. Belief in an idea before there is proof. Belief in a possibility before there is validation. Belief that something can exist even when nobody has seen it yet.
The result is not just a product. It's a signal. A reminder that creative ambition does not need permission. It only needs people willing to back it long enough for others to see it too.
And that's why this conversation matters. Because creatives need to hear from people who have built conviction before they built momentum. People who understand that belief often comes before evidence.
And that's why this feels like the kind of conversation that belongs with Utkarsh Gupta and Dishant Daryani, at Comet.
- orange chowk.






















We built this because creatives need a room like this.If Comet believes that too, let's figure out what doing this together looks like.