ELLE (UK)

Spotlight on... AHLUWALIA

EACH MONTH, WE BRING YOU AN UP-AND-COMING, INDEPENDEN­T FASHION BRAND WE KNOW YOU’LL WANT TO INVEST IN NOW

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‘I can be assertive, I can be loud, I can be funny, and I can have my hair however the f*ck I want it at work, because it’s my business.’ That’s the advantage of being your own boss, says the 27-year-old founder of the eponymous brand Priya Ahluwalia.

Creating a kaleidosco­pe of patchwork sportswear, vibrant mismatched suiting and denim out of a spare room in her mum’s home in south London, Ahluwalia’s collection is made up of upcycled vintage fabrics, which she tailors and embellishe­s – with unexpected beadwork on football T-shirts, for example.

It’s inspired by a trip to Nigeria during her Menswear MA studies at the University of Westminste­r. There, she noticed street traders in obscure British clothes such as ‘a top from a fun run in Leicester’ and asked them where they got the items.

Following a trail of the West’s rejected clothes that echoed her own family’s journey from Nigeria to Panipat in India (which is known as ‘cast-off capital’, as tonnes of discarded textiles from around the world end up there), her brand was born. Despite launching as a menswear brand in 2O18, women have flocked to Ahluwalia’s work. ‘Anyone can wear it, they’re just bloody clothes,’ she laughs. And wear it they do. Her fearlessne­ss with fabric and unexpected patchwork accents have already earned her the H&M Design Award 2O19, a collaborat­ion with Adidas, a capsule collection with Matchesfas­hion,com, and the LVMH Prize 2O2O.

Director of Buying at Browns,

Ida Petersson, says: ‘Priya connects hugely to her audience.

Her most recent London Fashion Week Men’s (LFWM) presentati­on in January 2O2O cemented her as a celebrated designer.

Her work is the present and future of fashion, working on conscious endeavours, all while refining her craft.’

Recently, Ahluwalia has explored culture and craft with a photobook and digital exhibition Jalebi, all about Southall, Britain’s first Punjabi community, beautifull­y capturing immigrant population­s in the UK. As for what’s next, the rising designer says a new studio that’s not in her mum’s house is on her bucket list. ‘I also want to do interiors,’ she adds. So soon we’ll all be able to dress – and even live – in Ahluwalia.

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Jacket, £385
Trousers, £365 Jacket, £385
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Shirt, £390
Shorts, £380 Shirt, £390
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Jacket, £730
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