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An
exquisitely designed and crafted garment splashed with the colours
turquoise and twilight is more than mere garb. A designer of such
garments, Yousuf Bashir, has returned to Pakistan after extensive
professional success with many big names in Hollywood movies, haute
couture, fashion houses and garment firms. Yousuf's creations are
spun from high quality fabrics and hand-loom French chantilly, distressed
suede or delicate cashmere knits, steeped in colour.
Yousuf's design signature presents a blend of "cultures
in which eastern designs are customised from a matrix of western
art." His signature style can be spotted in all his creations,
be they for Madonna or for a sale at Neiman Marcus or another garment
store. A writer, entrepreneur, artist and designer, fluent in Urdu,
Sindhi, Seraiki, Punjabi and Spanish, Yousuf now intends to bring
his talent home to Pakistan, and the opening of his design house
in Karachi should provide a welcome addition to the fashion scene.
Yousuf was born and
raised in Karachi and attended Pakistan Steel Cadet College in Steel
Town, Bin Qasim. When he graduated, he "was a crazy kid, just
a little out there." He moved to the US in 1991 and completed
a degree in food science in Lincoln, Nebraska. He wrote extensively
for a local newspaper, "mostly very pro-Pakistani stuff and
some controversial articles that got me in a lot of trouble, but
that is what I believed in."
Yousuf eventually opened a 'fashion cafe' in Lincoln, The Silk Cafe.
The food scientist became a successful restaurant owner and was
named entrepreneur of the year for two consecutive years by a local
news channel. Design had always been a passion for Yousuf and he
now turned his attention to fashion design. He hired an old Armenian
tailor who taught him practical, as well as creative craftsmanship
with cloth. But he learnt the subtleties of design on his own. "The
tailor taught me how to sew, do patterns and drape, then I got some
books and started sketching, sketching, sketching."
Yousuf moved to Los Angeles in 1997, setting his sights on Hollywood
and the music industry. His first high-profile client was Madonna
whom he was introduced to by Arianne Phillips (Mod Squad). He made
Madonna's costume, her set and the clothes for her dancers at the
Enchante MTV Awards which included Madonna's "Om Shanti"
video. He then started working closely with Sheryl Crow and subsequently
designed for Alanis Morissette and Jewel as his career snowballed,
primarily as a music video designer handling both set design and
garments. His creations have been worn by Naomi Campbell, Tyra Banks,
Brook Shields, Angelina Jolie, Oscar winner Denzel Washington and
many others. He collaborated with Arianne Phillips and Eduardo (Kama
Sutra) on several feature films. "I've become a little picky
about the features I work on. I've shifted from mainstream Hollywood
to more independent sort of films, docu-dramas filmed like documentaries
but scripted, or historical pieces for which I do my own research."
Yousuf came into mainstream design with collections for Arden B,
the Silvestio Brand, Bebe and then a company called Lapis. He did
knit-top design for Arden B and for Bebe he was denim-designer.
From there he went to dress-design, doing day dresses as well as
producing Kenneth Cole's first women's line, called Geisha. Yousuf
built up a reputation in the garment industry. His clients included
major garment stores like Nordstrom, Barneys, Neiman Marcus, Bergdoff,
XOXO and BCBG. Major mills in France, Turkey, and Mexico bought
his fabric design as his design projects diversified, going from
airline interior themes and airline employee wear to T-shirt patterns
for an Israeli company called Security.
In 2002, Yousuf built a vertical company with overseas/US production
and his label, Yousuf Bashir, also arrived in stores. "We did
the garment design, we did the first samples and patterns and, depending
how they wanted it, we did their productions, locally or overseas,
mostly in China or India. I had a digital-imaging studio, and we
did ad campaigns and photo shoots. Under one roof, we did everything."
Yousuf Bashir is now setting up a design studio in Karachi that
will feature his portfolio of creations. In regard to coming to
Pakistan, Yousuf says, "Here everything has changed, yet everything
is the same - and Karachi is the smallest biggest town I have ever
seen. I am looking for a location in the city, I definitely want
to do something here. Something the city has not seen, something
the city deserves."
He is teaching, at present, an intensive eight-week course in fashion
design at the Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture.
Designers, like other artists, colour their creations with the content
of their experience and vision. "My main inspiration comes
from nature. My culture has a lot of influence on my designs. Whatever
I do, there will be some touch of desi in it. But my emphasis when
I design is not so much on the embellishments - embroideries etc.
- but on the cut and fit. My garment needs to fit like a glove.
It has to look perfect. It has to be finished, so that it can be
worn inside out. That's my emphasis and design philosophy."
Colour tones, patterns and breath-taking colour combinations, nevertheless,
are featured in Yousuf's kaleidoscopic collections. "If I'm
doing a line with bright colours, I would sit in an aquarium or
go snorkelling on a coral reef to find the colours that would blow
my mind. For earthy or natural colours I would sit in the desert
after it rained, outside LA, in Joshua Tree Park; the steam from
the earth, the cactus, it's intoxicating. You can't get better colour
tones anywhere. Nature has given it to us, why go anywhere else."
Yousuf is currently continuing production for Barney and
Nordstrom and has an operational sales office in the US. He is doing
patterns for a line for Christian le Croix for Paris in 2005. Yousuf
combines eastern and western design aesthetics and his individuality
comes through in his garments. "I make my designs for my audience,
whatever the audience requires. I make something they will appreciate,
and it has my signature style."
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