How Kusumlata Singh Built a Home-Based Boutique in Balrampur
After pandemic closures, a home-based boutique bounces back with modern machines and word-of-mouth demand.
Kusumlata Singh, a home-based entrepreneur from Mansapuri Colony in Balrampur, Uttar Pradesh, has built a steady tailoring and design business around neighbourhood demand and custom orders. The founder and proprietor of her boutique says she began stitching professionally around 2012-13, after learning the craft in 2005, and has since specialised in blouses, petticoats, kurtas, fancy dresses, and lehengas for local clients.
Building a boutique around community demand
Kusumlata first took formal classes in Siddharthnagar in 2005, where she learned embroidery, sewing, and basic fabric painting. She initially worked from home, then shifted to a stall in a local marketplace known as Kalithan as orders grew. She sources raw materials herself, discusses designs with customers, and then cuts and stitches to measurement. Word of mouth has been her primary marketing channel, she says, and repeat orders from satisfied families have helped stabilise income.
Pandemic setback and a pivot to home
Unfortunately, COVID-19 disrupted foot traffic, forcing many small retailers to shut their doors. Kusumlata recalls that she had to give up the rented outlet when movement restrictions hit and quickly returned to a home-based model. Thankfully, existing customers followed her, and new clients, too began visiting the home workshop as confidence returned. The business supports a family of five, she says, with her husband also earning and three young children currently in school.
How did the CM Yuva scheme change her day-to-day
Kusumlata explains that capital constraints limited her ability to purchase modern sewing equipment. She applied for support under the state government’s Chief Minister's Yuva Udyami Vikas Yojana scheme, and used the loan to acquire newer machines. The upgrade shortened turnaround times and improved finish quality, she says, noting that work which earlier took two hours can now be completed in about one hour.
Operating the machines was self-taught through online videos, and while no formal training component accompanied the loan, the infusion of credit proved catalytic in ramping up output and servicing seasonal demand, especially during the wedding months.
What she makes and how she prices
The boutique’s core catalogue covers everyday wear and occasion pieces. According to Kusumlata, blouses and petticoats remain steady sellers, while customised kurtas and lehengas see a spike during wedding season.
She follows a made-to-measure approach and works to client budgets, adding trims, embroidery and panels based on design complexity. Sourcing is done locally to keep costs predictable and turnaround times tight.
Advice to aspiring homepreneurs
The Balrampur entrepreneur suggests that first-time founders consider starting from home to avoid rental overheads and to stay close to customers. She advises peers to explore government credit schemes, maintain quality, and build trust by delivering on time.
Looking ahead, Kusumlata hopes to ship her designs beyond the town and to expand the range of designs as capacity grows. Her story, grounded in skills, small-ticket credit and community referrals, underlines how home-based micro-businesses can recover from shocks and create steady livelihoods in India’s smaller cities.
What is CM YUVA Scheme?
Under the leadership of Hon’ble Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Yogi Adityanath Ji, the state government aims to transform youth from job seekers into job creators.
To achieve this vision, the Directorate of Industries and Enterprise Promotion, under the Department of Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises and Export Promotion, is implementing the ‘Mukhyamantri Yuva Udyami Vikas Abhiyan’ (CM YUVA) Yojana.
Under this scheme, young entrepreneurs are provided with up to Rs 5 lakh in 100% interest-free and collateral-free loans to start their industrial or service-based ventures. In addition, beneficiaries also receive a 10% margin money subsidy on the project cost.
CM YUVA is not just a financial assistance scheme; it also provides mentorship, guidance, market access, and essential resources to help youth become self-reliant entrepreneurs and generate employment opportunities for others.
Click here to know more about the CM YUVA Scheme.

