Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

‘crazy’ idea that’s taking our fashion places

As the HSBC Colombo Fashion Week’s Resortwear show goes to Galle, the man behind it all, talks to

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Ajai Vir Singh is an Indian turned Sri Lankan. For proof you only have to look back to 2003, when he launched the Colombo Fashion Week. Ten years and many successful­ly launched designers later, you could say Ajai has played a big role in revitalisi­ng Sri Lanka’s once flagging fashion industry.

Sri Lanka is his adopted country. It’s where he fell in love, married, had children and changed several destinies. Does he ever think of what he left behind in India? Not really. “I’ve always seen CFW as my way of giving back to Sri Lanka.”

Fashion is in Ajai’s blood-he doesn’t really have an explanatio­n for it apart from being fascinated by it since childhood. Growing up in India, he had some strong exposure to cutting edge design and that curious blend of East-meets-West fashion. Ajai came to Sri Lanka as an advertisin­g profession­al but soon found himself a little bored by the business. “My heart wasn’t in it,” he says. Well the heart wants what it wants and Ajai’s wanted to do something about the unharnesse­d potential the country’s fashion industry had. And so, in 2003, he launched the first ever Colombo Fashion Week.

No one would argue that the man doesn’t know his design-Ajai is the creative vision behind the successful Arugam Bay brand, menswear line Stringhopp­er and ethical brand Conscience. These intrinsica­lly Sri Lankan names are something he takes a lot of pride in. “I ask my CFW designers this question all the timewhy on earth are your labels so Western? Take some pride in your name and heritage. To me these are internatio­nal names.”

Not many Sri Lankans thought so, though, when they started CFW back in 2003. “No one really gave us a chance, you know?” he remembers. “There were all these people saying ‘a fashion week in Colombo? Are you crazy?’ But hey, everything has to start somewhere.” To be honest Ajai doesn’t really blame the sceptics. He started Colombo Fashion Week at a time when Sri Lankan labels were only something to applaud but not wear, and there were no design schools churning out young promise. That first show had six designers (three local, surprising­ly impossible to get) over a two-day period. It wasn’t an overnight success but it was definitely a start.

A decade later, Colombo Fashion Week has made its presence felt in South Asia. Over the years Ajai, together with trusty business partners Dirk Flamer Caldera and Prasad Bidapa has developed CFW into something any Sri Lankan would be proud to call their own. Every year the premise of the show grew exponentia­lly and after a certain point it was the designers who were calling the organisers instead of the other way round. Today you can apply to showcase your designs at CFW; there’s a panel made up of several influentia­l fashion designers who decide if you meet their standards.

Acting frequently in an advisory capacity you’ll also find Bibi Russell, a Bangladesh­i designer renowned internatio­nally for her work with local craftspeop­le. Bibi has been a constant presence at the show for the last few years along with Spanish heavyweigh­t Agatha Ruiz De La Prada and designers like Rizwan Beyg and James Ferreira. We wonder what the allure of something like Colombo Fashion Week is for these internatio­nally acclaimed designersa­fter all, they are exhibiting for what is still a local audience. Ajai says it’s a matter of knowing potential when you see it. He knows that CFW is still small fry in comparison to its Indian and Western counterpar­ts-but it’s only a baby still, after all. “Designers like Bibi know that CFW can only get bigger and better. They’re happy to be on board.” Last year Ferreira launched a collection with Cotton Collection-opportunit­y for these designers can be found closer to home as well, says Ajai.

It’s not all about the glitz and glamour of the three-day event for the designers though. The invite-only show is made up of a percentage of local and internatio­nal retail buyers who decide if they want to work with a particular designer after the show. As with any fashion week, this is the main premise. Fashion designers have to make money too, Ajai laughs. This is why he launched the CFW Resortwear show last year-“I don’t want our designers to settle into doing only a collection a year,” he explains. With this show (to be held on October 5 and 6 in Galle), he’s offering two business peaks for the designers. One is with the mainly Western premise of the main show and with this, an opportunit­y to create and showcase garments they were literally born to design. After all, who better to design for warm weather than someone who’s lived in it all their life?

Last year’s show was in Negombo and this year’s will be in Galle. One show will be held on a street inside Galle Fort. The nightmare of the logistics is something he happily leaves to Chief Coordinato­r Roshinee Rajasingam-Wijeratne and her trusty team. His job is to wander around Galle trying to come up with even more impossible locations! But with the picturesqu­e backdrop of the old Dutch church and the magisteria­l courts behind them, the audience should have something exciting to look forward to. (fun fact-this year’s logo is a cockerel and Ajai says this is symbolic of Galle. Apparently when the Portuguese landed in Sri Lanka they heard a cock crow and ‘Galle’ is similar to the Portuguese word ‘galeto’ for the bird).

CFW will also conduct a ‘Local

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