Lethbridge Herald

Duchess shows love for Canadian fashion

MEGHAN WEARS CANADIAN DESIGN TO EVENT

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A fondness for Canadian fashion apparently hasn’t waned for Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex. The former Toronto resident was photograph­ed Tuesday in London wearing a sleeveless trench dress by the Calgary brand Nonie.

The new royal wore the tailored garment — in a dusty rose hue dubbed “blush” on the company’s website — while attending the official opening of the Nelson Mandela Centenary Exhibition alongside her husband, Prince Harry.

Nonie is believed to be the first Canadian based ready-towear brand the duchess has showcased at a public event since her wedding in May.

Fashion designer Nina Kharey said her public relations team alerted her in the wee hours of the morning by text, and then she saw the photos online.

“It’s just surreal, I still can’t believe it’s actually happened,” Kharey said when reached by phone a few hours later in Calgary.

“She looks stunning, stunning. I actually can’t get over how good she looks in it. I’ve been trying to imagine what she would look like in it.”

Kharey has never met Meghan but said the former “Suits” star requested the dress last November, before she was engaged. The tailored dress is part of her spring/summer 2018 collection and retails for $1,085.00. It’s also available in black.

Meghan has long been a champion of Canadian fashion brands, dating back to her time living in Toronto while she filmed her seven-season run on the legal drama.

Her Canuck favourites include the luxury outerwear brand Sentaler, Aritzia, Smythe, Line the Label, Mackage, Birks and Reitmans.

Immediatel­y after Meghan was photograph­ed in Nonie, Kharey said she began sensing the impact of the famous “Meghan effect” — the boost in publicity and product requests that typically come after the popular royal appears in public wearing a particular brand.

“My website has thousands of hits at the moment, which is a massive spike in our online presence. My Instagram is just exploding, I can’t keep up.”

All the attention comes just as Kharey turns her efforts towards breaking into the New York market and beyond.

“This is definitely a good step in the right direction, it’s definitely going to get me the internatio­nal eyes that I need at the moment,” she said.

“Getting that royal stamp of approval is just huge .... It is tough doing this from Calgary but things like this, when the most famous woman in the world is wearing one of your dresses and looking amazing in it, it does wonders for a brand like mine.”

The 35-year-old already has an impressive client list, including homegrown tastemaker­s Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Jessica Mulroney and Chantal Kreviazuk.

But she wasn’t always certain fashion was the right career path, even though she always loved clothes and notes the fashion business is in her blood.

Kharey’s parents immigrated from Punjab, India in the 1970s, and her mother found work as seamstress for a menswear line and while her father managed a knits factory.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Meghan the Duchess of Sussex looks at a Shakespear­e book favoured by prisoners on Robben Island during the launch of the Nelson Mandela Centenary Exhibition, marking the 100th anniversar­y of antiaparth­eid leader’s birth, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in...
Associated Press photo Meghan the Duchess of Sussex looks at a Shakespear­e book favoured by prisoners on Robben Island during the launch of the Nelson Mandela Centenary Exhibition, marking the 100th anniversar­y of antiaparth­eid leader’s birth, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in...

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