Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dolce & Gabbana’s Embellishe­d Hijabs and Abayas are great news for Muslim women— when will other brands follow suit?

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News broke that Dolce & Gabbana is producing a collection of hijabs and abayas targeted to Muslim customers in the Middle East. The garments, while engineered for modesty, have all the flair of any other Dolce & Gabbana collection—a little jewel-encrusted lemon here, some black lace trim there—and are styled alongside the label’s cocktail jewelry, oversize sunglasses, and patterned bags in a lookbook shoot. To Muslim women with a taste for luxury fashion, this collection is an exciting developmen­t.

The line will likely prove good news for D&G’s 2016 revenue as well. According to a report by Thomson Reuters, Muslim shoppers spent $266 billion on clothing and footwear in 2013 and are expected to spend $484 billion by 2019. Following similar booms in the Chinese, Japanese, and other Asian markets in the late aughts and early ’10s, high fashion brands revamped their accessorie­s strategies to appeal to the shopping habits of an Asian clientele. That meant a flood of miniature bags and stylized phone cases that was soon followed by many Asianinspi­red collection­s and destinatio­n shows. The benefits of those decisions are still seen today: A handbag designer recently told me her miniature purses, sized so small as to only fit an iPhone, were still her top sellers in Japan. So why aren’t more Western houses creating collection­s for the Middle Eastern market?

January 2016Courte­sy VOGUE

 ??  ?? We reproduce excerpts of a 2016 article that features Dolce Gabbana's designs that combined 'modesty and flair' for the modern Muslim woman
We reproduce excerpts of a 2016 article that features Dolce Gabbana's designs that combined 'modesty and flair' for the modern Muslim woman

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