Finished films, of course, strip this all away, all the extraneous bits obscured or edited out, tossed aside and forgotten. It is extraordinary, as anthropologist Chihab El Khachab has argued in his work on Egyptian filmmaking, to think of the accumulation of day-to-day work, some of it done at a fever pitch of intensity, routinely erased from the films we see on our screens. As an anthropologist, I was drawn to examine all the facets of costume production and later production design. Now, having studied designers, assistants, hairdressers, craftspeople and crew, I would argue that there are different kinds of value throughout the film world, all of them essential, even if they come in different currencies. Each practitioner is, in his or her own way, a co-author of the finished product. Truly comprehending film workers and how their efforts mesh with the designs and intentions of others in the filmmaking process, is a vital area for research, research that must also take stock of recent, enormous changes both in the industry and in India at large.