About The Project
Gone Kesh is a story about a girl named Enakshi whose life turns upside down when she is
diagnosed with alopecia and starts losing her hair drastically. It shows the challenges of being a bald girl in a society which has its set beauty standards for a girl and the way she manages to break all the barriers and come out of her insecurities to follow her dreams fearlessly.
It was beautifully directed by Qasim Khallow with some great performances by Shweta Tripathi and Jitendra Kumar in its lead roles.
The movie was well-received and won many accolades. It won the Golden Fox Award at the Calcutta International Cult Film Festival 2020, CICFF Award at Cult Critic Awards and Virgin Cinefest for Debut Filmmaker – Qasim Khallow.
Work We Did
Cast We Worked On
A Few Clicks
In The Press
Bollywood Backstage: Meet the Prosthetic Artist of ‘Chichhore’
Here’s how a prosthetic artist creates and executes a look with the help of SFX makeup. Gone are the days when Bollywood could show a human transform into a werewolf with a simple mask used in the sequence.
NetTV4U Does An Article On Preetisheel Singh D’Souza
Preetisheel Singh is a famous make-up artist of the Bollywood industry. Specializing in prosthetic make-up, she gave us proof of her exquisite work in films such as Bajiroa Mastani, Haider, and Brothers.
Preetisheel Singh — Transforming Bollywood with her masterstrokes
In recent years Bollywood has presented us with characters that evoked different emotions in us. If Amitabh Bhachan and Rishi Kapoor made us laugh and adore them with their cuteness in 102 not out, Ranveer Singh scared us to the core with his looks as Alauddin Khilji.
We have set up India’s first make-up and prosthetics lab
Make-up artist and prosthetics designer Preetisheel Singh, who won huge acclaim for her work in films like Padmaavat and Bajirao Mastani, speaks to Latha Srinivasan about her magic touch.
Behind that mask
What do films such as Padmaavat, Bajirao Mastani, Housefull 3, Mom, Talwar, The House Next Door, Haider as well as the pre-Mughal historical epic Nanak Shah Fakir have in common?