The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Basic Instincts

Designers attempted to subvert convention­al rules of dressing and added their signature touch to style staples on Day 3 of Lakme Fashion Week Winter/festive 2016

- KIMI DANGOR

WHEN DESIGNER par excellence and textile wizard Rajesh Pratap Singh presents a white shirt, it is never basic or simple. So when he calls a collection “The Punjabi Suit”, you can be rest assured that it won’t be about convention­al salwar kameez sets and Patiala pants. On Friday night, during the big reveal of his collection on the Lakme Fashion Week (LFW) Winter/festive 2016 ramp, Singh proved yet again why he is the master of reinventio­n.

His trademark white shirt came in a longer length, with an off-centre placket and rolled-up collar. His salwar-kameez interpreta­tions saw cropped lengths teamed with off-kilter striped kurtis and voluminous pintucked tunics cinched by vests and waistcoats. All topped with a severe narrow dupatta and Singh’s trademark selvedge stripe running down the back. Both women and men donned wide-leg trousers, skirt/pants combos and dhoti variations with doublebrea­sted jackets and bandhgalas, marking a distinctly gender-neutral statement.

Also shrugging off stereotype­s was Arjun Saluja, who named his collection “Dissonance”, put zippers and asymmetric hems on sherwani shapes and added lopsided plackets to angular kurtas. Taking the deconstruc­tion theme forward, he took the bomber jacket and gave it his inimitable twist, with a hem that reached mid-thigh and pockets on extra-long cowled sleeves. The classic white men’s kurta saw an overlappin­g front and was teamed with wideleg trousers.

In contrast, Kanika Goyal brought on drama with a play on the lapels of her jackets and coats. Inspired by architect Frank Gehry and his disruptive design philosophy, Goyal deconstruc­ted convention­al shapes by adding a leather patch under the lapels of a teal coat, presenting a sleeveless jacket with one collar and another variation with multiple lapels in contrastin­g hues.

Taking a playful view of things was upcycling specialist Kriti Tula of Doodlage with her collection “Hopscotch”. She used the convention­al shirt and regular cropped pants, turned them into patchwork masterpiec­es and dressed them up with paint splashes and quirky quotes.

To dye for, literally, were some interestin­g pieces from Chirag Nainani’s “Coup De Grace”, where his resist dyeing expertise was seen on a wine-coloured sari wrapped over palazzo pants, topped with a belted jacket. Begging for attention were his twists on the kalidar peplum top and a four-pocketed trench coat teamed with a maxi dress.

Also going maximal in silhouette and concept, was Sohaya Misra of Chola who took comfort dressing to a whole new level. Generous cowls added volume to floorlengt­h shirt dresses and over-sized shirt-style trench coats buttoned up in the front and back. Seeing the ease with which showstoppe­r Manisha Koirala walked the ramp, we were tempted to turn up the volume too.

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from left) Manisha Koirala walked the ramp for Sohaya Misra; Kanika Goyal made the collar a talking point; designs from Rajesh Pratap Singh’s collection; Arjun Saluja attempted to blur gender lines with “Dissonance”
(Clockwise from left) Manisha Koirala walked the ramp for Sohaya Misra; Kanika Goyal made the collar a talking point; designs from Rajesh Pratap Singh’s collection; Arjun Saluja attempted to blur gender lines with “Dissonance”
 ?? Dilip Kagda ??
Dilip Kagda
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