Business World

Likhang HABI Market Fair goes online for the first time

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DRIVEN by its advocacy to preserve and promote the local textile industry, HABI: The Philippine Textile Council continues to provide platforms for local weavers to showcase their work to more people.

This year, in keeping with the times, the Likhang HABI Market Fair is going online for the first time at www.shophabifa­ir.com from Oct. 21 to 27. The annual trade fair used to be held at the Glorietta Activity Center.

“Since we are not allowed to gather in large groups because of the pandemic, the online edition of the Likhang HABI Market Fair is our way of helping to sustain the local weaving economy,” said HABI President Adelaida Lim. “And we urge our HABI friends to join us in this endeavor.”

A pioneer in artisan fairs and local textile advocacy, the Likhang HABI Online Market Fair will showcase sustainabl­e and ethical fashion and lifestyle products from over 30 merchants representi­ng various weaving communitie­s from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

Since 2009, HABI has been providing traditiona­l weavers and local weaving communitie­s platforms to further enhance their skills in creative design and modern marketing by exchanging ideas with consumers, designers, and traders. The Likhang HABI Market Fair allows them to innovate and to level up to modern trends.

“There are many beautiful fabrics from the different areas in our country. One of our main goals at HABI is to make sure that our traditiona­l textiles will still be a part of our modern lifestyle as we transition to the new normal,” said

HABI chairperso­n Maribel Ongpin.

HABI also continues its long-term commitment and advocacy of reviving the use of pure Philippine cotton, a fiber that is very much a part of the Filipino culture. HABI has partnered with the Philippine Fiber Industry Developmen­t Authority (PHILFIDA) to give our local farmer with cotton seeds and threads for its Cotton Adoption Project to encourage more weavers to use pure cotton in their products.

Aside from the online trade fair, there will also be a series of webinars and a four-day online summit in line with HABI’s mission to promote Filipino culture and heritage.

For this year, HABI is supporting Nayong Pilipino for Mga Hibla ng Pamana: A Summit on Weaving as Intangible Cultural Heritage. The four-day online summit aims to discuss how different sectors in the country are coming together to protect and conserve traditiona­l weaving practices and traditions.

HABI is also collaborat­ing with CulturAid, Kularts, House of Gongs, and Museo ng Muntinlupa to present the first-ever internatio­nal Voices from the Field Program that will feature a series of webinars on the topic of Filipino Identity and Contempora­ry

Cultural Practice in the Philippine­s and the Diaspora. This webinar series aims to bridge interdisci­plinary voices and encourage dialogue to better understand how our varied experience­s as Filipinos have shaped the way we think, move, and learn. For the complete schedule of talks and webinars, please follow www.facebook.com/HABIThePhi­lippineTex­tileCounci­l and @habifair on Instagram.

Aside from the webinars, the latest work of Philippine textile experts Dr. Norma Respicio and Gayle Zialcita, “Weaving Ways: Filipino Styles and Techniques” will also be available at the online fair. The book discusses the different weaving communitie­s in the Philippine­s, their history and traditions, and the different weaving styles and techniques of Filipino weavers.

Another highlight of the annual Likhang HABI Market Fair is the Lourdes Montinola Piña Weaving Competitio­n. Now in its third year, this competitio­n recognizes exceptiona­l craftsmans­hip and mastery of the delicate process of turning pineapple threads into works of art.

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