Hawke's Bay Today

Awards showcase for graduates

Former EIT students shine in national competitio­n for Maori fashion students

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Fashion designer Misty Ratima’s star is glowing ever brighter, with the EIT graduate collecting the supreme award in a nationwide competitio­n for Ma¯ori fashion talents for a second time.

Te Orihau Karaitiana, another graduate of EIT’s Certificat­e in Fashion Apparel, was a runner-up in the emerging designers section of the sold-out Miromoda event, staged at Porirua’s Pataka Art + Museum.

The pair, who are both of Nga¯ti Kahungunu descent, crafted their collection­s in the fashion workshop at EIT’s ideaschool.

Misty submitted two collection­s for this year’s competitio­n.

The first, entitled Ko Rangi Ki Runga, Ko Papa Ki Raro, is a unisex streetwear collection that speaks about the importance of balance between the natural environmen­t and humankind.

The second, named Decolonise, is an avant garde collection that serves to provoke in-depth discussion about the sacredness of women and whare tangata (house of humanity, womb).

Misty has made an online release of key garments under her Te Kohu clothing label and hopes to add new garments for sale by the end of the year.

For his Taura Here collection, Te Orihau used natural materials such as onion skins and wood chips to hand dye natural fabrics — merino, bamboo, silk, organic cotton and charcoal and linen.

Meaning binding together, Taura Here was about incorporat­ing the natural environmen­t and natural dyes and fabrics in his garments, says Te Orihau, a designer and assistant buyer for Aroha & Friends in Ahuriri.

The wins mean both designers will showcase their collection­s to a live audience at New Zealand Fashion Week, to be held in Auckland’s Viaduct in late August.

As well as the supreme award, Misty was also first equal in the avant garde designer section and runner-up in the establishe­d designers’ class.

Misty, who also has whakapapa links to Rongamaiwa­hine, Rongawhaka­ata and Nga¯ti Hine, started her EIT study journey at Te

ranga Waka, where she gained a Bachelor of Arts (Ma¯ori).

After completing the fashion certificat­e programme, she crosscredi­ted into ideaschool’s Bachelor of Visual Arts and Design. Since 2013, she has also tutored EIT students in te reo Ma¯ori.

After living in Auckland for 17 years, it was the pull of her tu¯rangawaewa­e that brought Misty back to Hawke’s Bay, where she was born and raised.

Her wha¯nau and her ancestors, she says, are her biggest personal and creative influences.

With Ma¯ori culture her wellspring, the fashion designer and artist plans to continue drawing conceptual­ly from traditiona­l stories, beliefs and practices in expressing herself in contempora­ry creative media.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? A winning trio — Hawke’s Bay-based fashion designers Te Orihau Karaitiana and Misty Ratima flank Miromodo cofounder Ata Te Kanawa.
Photo / Supplied A winning trio — Hawke’s Bay-based fashion designers Te Orihau Karaitiana and Misty Ratima flank Miromodo cofounder Ata Te Kanawa.

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