FPW Day 3: Sonya Battla experiments and Generation reinvents itself
There’s outstanding fashion, abysmally bad fashion and then, retail friendly design that is mostly mundane. It was this last category that prevailed for most of the third day of Fashion Pakistan Week (FPW).
Most designers insisted on sticking to their comfort zones which belies the whole point of showing at fashion week. If you don’t have any new statements to make, why show at all? Despite celebrity showstoppers galore, there were very few truly scintillating moments.
Why are so many designers losing their verve, one wonders. Has the spirit to create outstanding design been subdued by the consistent flattery that prevails on social media, regardless of merit? It might be the case. Social media reviewers have happily declared each and every collection to be ‘outstanding’, ‘gorgeous’ and ‘stunning’.
We beg to differ.
Sonya Battla
The opening was strong enough – Sonya Battla collaborated with textile and visual art students from Karachi University to create the very experimental ‘Identity’.
The all-white collection was a work in artistry, exemplifying the designer’s proficiency with structure and her commitment to original, creative design. There were multi-tiered dresses, layers of triangular cut-outs, capes fashioned from cut-work, necklines jutting out at three-dimensional angles, wires and webs winding about and hemlines that rose and fell at stiff inclines. It was a collection laden with meaning; for instance, the bubble wrap used alongside leather flowers symbolized the over-usage of plastic and how waste is just discarded. The inclusion of barbed wire depicted thorny insides to beautiful exteriors and an outfit, ostentatiously created with huge thread balls, showed how individuals get overpowered.
There wasn’t much in the collection that was instantly wearable but this was Sonya’s intention. She did successfully craft catwalk drama and her efforts were aided by the adroit N-Pro team, styling the models with stark white wigs and bold theatrical make-up.
Director Asad Ul Haq played the showstopping necromancer, hinting at the local pir culture with his staff and steaming pot.
The challenge is for Sonya to now to translate her designs to the less flamboyant realms of luxury-pret for her store in Karachi. It’s a line-up we’ll certainly be watching out for!
Generation
In contrast, designer Khadija Rahman’s first collection for Generation was chic wearable design that you just wanted to buy there and then, right off the catwalk. ‘A dot that went for a walk’ had a frivolous beat of its very own, with myriad versions of the shalwar, reinvented takes on tunics, long, loose fringes that criss-crossed in some very unique ways and the occasional twinkle of gota-work. Long diaphanous kameezes flowed over brightly hued pants or blouses while shorter form-fitted tunics were paired with billowy lowers.
If this is going to be Generation’s fashion-forward new vibe then it’s going to up the ante for the local high-street. A fabulous debut!
And then fashion’s high note began dwindling to a low, monotonous beat.
Al-Karam
Al-Karam’s show can be appreciated for presenting wearable clothes in some complimentary color palettes. It was a relief that they did not attempt fashioning their fabric into over-designed silhouettes that would make no sense either on or off the catwalk. The collection of shalwars, cigarette pants, tunics, kaftans and even a jumpsuit or two was very well-tailored. Some on-trend accessorizing was also at play: a casual belt cinching a loose tunic and color-coordinated clutches.
Actress Syra Shahroz as showstopper looked extremely pretty. She only recently made Al-Karam’s lawn stand out on billboards. She did as much for their fashion week line-up.
Nevertheless, the design ethos was one that we have seen many times before. Al-Karam has strong market-centric aesthetics that now need to inch towards the cutting-edge. Only then will it manage to make the cut at fashion weeks.
Natasha Kamal
Lahore-based Natasha Kamal had plenty of friends cheering for her from the audience. But from our objective standpoint, her resort collection wasn’t much to enthuse about.
The cutwork and stitched on floral embellishments were not particularly inspiring and Fouzia Aman’s neckline malfunctioned right in the middle of the catwalk, revealing a bit too much to the cameras!
Form-fitting designs, worn by Cybil and Fia were quite unflattering.