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Indian
fashion designers Suneet Varma and Rina Dhaka, along with three
Indian models, were the highlights of a fund-raiser fashion show
that lured Karachiites into spending a stupendous amount of money
in the name of charity
yet again. The show was held for the
benefit of the non-profit Teachers' Resource Centre, dedicated to
that most deserving of Pakistani causes - the improvement of school
education.
The show established that Pakistani zardozi craftsmanship
is far superior to the Indian version. Rather than be accused of
letting my native pride colour my perceptions, it's best to quote
Indian fashion designer Rina Dhaka, who said that "the major
difference between Indian and Pakistani fashions is the quality
of your zardozi. It is far better, more intricate and beautiful
than ours."
The show opened with Suneet Varma's collection. The designer
has made a transition from a primarily western-wear design philosophy
to ethnic chic. The transition, however, remains to be completed.
The most prominent feature of Varma's collection was his use of
colour. A veritable explosion of colour bamboozled the senses, with
bright yellows, screaming reds, fuchsias and mint greens - often
in the same outfit - battling for attention on the catwalk. Combinations
of gray and brown, yellow and blue, white and apple-green worked
- and proved that fashion truly is colour-blind. According to Suneet,
"for me fashion is a polite way to spell sex." If 'Chaos
of Sex' was the theme of Suneet's collection, then he certainly
succeeded for chaos definitely reigned supreme.
Sana Safinaz's chic, understated and extremely wearable collection
followed Suneet's, their soft colours soothing the senses after
the flash and pizazz of Varma's couture. The kaftan-inspired drop-shoulder
tops with straight pants, both worked along the edges, provided
an unusual visual presentation of flow meeting structure. The line
highlighted that the duo's clothes are not just for anorexic waifs.
The collection aimed to be sensual rather than downright sexy, and
made the point brilliantly
Rina Dhaka's Indo-Pak desert-inspired
collection - vibrant, gregarious and very statement-oriented - followed
the subtlety of Sana and Safinaz. Having grown up in a haveli in
Rajasthan has left a deep impact on her design philosophy. With
teddy-girl shirts and cigarette pants, Rina's silhouette harked
back to '60s chic. Her reinterpretation of the look was contemporary
although unfortunately, it didn't go far enough. Dhaka's segment
was a little over-the-top, Bollywood style, and could have done
with a tad more simplicity - and without the colourful parandas
and yogi-like face stripes.
While Suneet Varma's knowledge of Pakistani fashion was limited
to only to the pages of Libas, Rina seemed to be well acquainted
with the Pakistani style scene and its movers and shakers. She has
worked with Faiza Samee and Deepak Perwani and is an admirer of
Rizwan Beyg's design philosophy, often using Pakistani textiles
in her collections.
Faiza Samee's traditional embroidery and zardozi harkened back to
old world beauty and elegance. Samee's traditional numbers were
far superior to any of her contemporary outfits. Rather than trying
to modernise, she should stick to what she does best.
The much-touted Dior "collection", mostly comprising t-shirts,
jeans and Dior accessories, seemed off the rack rather than off
the runway. The few fringed dresses - in red, khaki and black -
seemed out of place and failed to qualify as couture.
With Tariq Amin doing the hair, make-up and styling, the show, produced
by Frieha Altaf, brought together Indian and Pakistani designers on
an elegant and philanthropic forum. Charity begins at home - but it
ain't a bad idea to bring the neighbours into the act . |