Gulf News

Weaving a design dream

- BY Manjari Saxena, Deputy tabloid! Editor

Indian designer Ritu Kumar talks about handloom revival and sustainabl­e fashion

Ritu Kumar has been designing for the Indian fashion industry since a time the terms “fashion” and “trend” were relatively unknown in the country. Now, almost 45 years later, she’s a name recognised all over the world and Dubai happens to be a favourite place; she opened her second boutique in the city last week at Dubai Festival City.

Kumar started designing bridal wear and brought in what can be termed as Indian “couture” in the 1960s and 70s, trying to refresh the dying indigenous practices of weaving and handloom.

“When I started, we were like barefoot doctors going out into the field to discover the embroideri­es, the prints. That was the post-independen­ce era in India when there was a ban on just about anything that was imported,” Kumar told tabloid!. “I couldn’t import even a small thing like a button or a zip. So we had to find alternativ­es from within the country. Thereby, we came up with a very strong identity outside India and that continues, as [we are] perhaps the only country in the world that is not dictated by Paris or New York.”

And the new boutique, she says, “is in keeping with this language” that designers in India have been striving for.

“India has been known for its very exotic embroideri­es, its bridal collection­s and sometimes its over-the-top dressing [style],” she continues. “We love costumery. This line actually is very high street but with a difference. The difference is the fabrics, which are very natural — mainly cotton, which the world is almost not using any longer — and it comes from [having deep] root[s]. It has taken inspiratio­n from the main craft areas in the country, used the aesthetics and put on to fairly modern clothes with which the younger generation — or anybody — could vibe.”

What are the demands of UAE customers?

Fashion demands are becoming very internatio­nal. They are not pockets — other than that of wedding clothes. The world is dressing similarly as the younger, the modern woman has access to the same things in India as in America. It’s just that choices are now more interestin­g. They are starting to see the difference between handmade and machine-made. That’s where lies the diversity and richness of what I’ve been able to do for a long time now.

You are a forerunner for haute couture in India, which mainly sees bridalwear as couture. How has couture changed?

We don’t follow trends in India, we create our own, going with the climate and our traditiona­l aspects. So it is a very exciting place to be, but it has come a long, long way from nothing to having about 40 fashion weeks and a huge population that enjoys them.

The state of haute couture in India is perhaps the healthiest as compared to the rest of the world, in the sense it is not in the red. I mean, the latest [show] I’ve done is the Benares sari. You cannot imagine the expertise that goes into weaving the Benares sari. So couture in India maybe defined as slightly different because they are not ball gowns. But definitely a six-month’s work on a lehnga for a bride is couture — and it’s very much alive and kicking.

With shows like the one you had at Lakme Fashion Week last month, designers are showcasing the expertise of these craftsmen and they’ve finally started to receive their due. What are the challenges you faced with them, if any?

When I started working the biggest challenge was that the craftspeop­le and their work was non-existent. We are talking of about 150 years of colonial rule whereby the taxes that were levied on these indigenous crafts had actually wiped them out. So when we went back to work in this area — at least when I did — I used museum collection­s to figure out what it was that they made earlier. It was not an easy journey but was very exciting and enriching. And the crafts, from being practicall­y non-existent, are today a very strong force in India. We have 16 million people actively involved in textile crafts by hand. These are not studios, but people who are making a livelihood, whereby creating a fabulously miraculous day in fashion in India.

Even the government of India is now actively involved in this initiative. How do you think it’ll help the craftsmen?

Initially the government had hosted the Vishwakarm­a exhibition­s, which had brought out all the crafts of India but, like

“We don’t follow trends in India, we create our own, going with the climate and our traditiona­l aspects.” RITU KUMAR Designer

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates