Sania Maskatiya and Zara Shahjahan steal the show on PSFW Day1
“Which show will you be attending?” the red carpet buzzed on the first night of the PFDC Sunsilk Fashion Week (PSFW). Aside from the media – destined to attend each and every show – there were attendees who had swooped in to see particular designers. Everyone had their favourites.
With a hefty designer lineup that kicked off with Zara Shahjahan and was followed up by Sania Maskatiya, Hussain Rehar, Yahsir Waheed and a finale by Fahad Hussayn, there was so much to look forward to.
In fact, the PSFW montage, overall, boasts some very intriguing names. Kudos to the council for collating a great designer lineup. And most of the shows on the first day did not disappoint at all. But before we proceed to dissecting the collections, here’s a point to ponder: what exactly is pret in Pakistan?
The PSFW is a platform that has often pronounced itself to be dedicated to pret but then, how does one define this particular genre in Pakistani fashion? Is it gota worked onto wearable evening wear that could also be worn on festive occasions? Perhaps. Is it lawn, given cutting edge twists, layered trench coats and spectacularly aligned sequins, trailing down jackets and tunics?
I would think so. Is it lehngas, worked with intricate embroideries and a bride, swathed in twinkling florals, her head covered, wearing a jhoomar, a teeka, the whole shebang? Of course not. Or is it now? What are the Pakistan Fashion Design Council’s (PFDC) thoughts on this?
Some gorgeous, utterly covetable designs trooped down the PSFW runway on the first day but not all of them qualified as pret. It’s quite evident that designers’ inclinations towards the profitable realms of wedding-wear cannot be reigned. Ever.
Here’s the lowdown on the pret, the not-so-pret and the not-pret-at-all seen last night at PSFW…