It seems Generation doesn't know how much Pakistani schoolteachers earn
It’s summer 2015 in Karachi and the culture of pret fashion is becoming more and more influential. Clothing brands like J., Ideas, Al Karam and Satrangi have launched entire pret collections for Ashura: translating another tragedy into a means of capitalisation.
I was a part of the content team at a well-known digital agency at the time, so my job was to come up with titles for a black and white collection but without mentioning that it was targeted for Ashura.
They asked me to paint it in colourful French vocabulary that would sound fancy but also not be comprehensible for many. I ended up calling the collection ‘Monochrome’ but still wasn’t very proud of it.
Since then, pret clothing has become the only way of life for the upper middle class Pakistani woman — unless she can’t find her size, which is often.
Names like Generation then tapped into that market and revamped themselves as the ideal place for women to buy plus-size, ready-made clothing from.
We had heard of our mothers loving Generation, but it took us a while to understand their very unique aesthetic and start admiring it.
Very recently, Generation, did a whole marketing campaign towards the education sector. The art and marketing team must have been under a lot of pressure after a couple of very successful social media campaigns revolving around issues like water scarcity, disability, body image issues and no-make up faces.
So, Generation did what it does best: think out of the box.
The campaign features a school teacher wearing three-piece suits that cost between almost Rs7,000 and Rs9,000. This sparked a debate on social media, where people disclosed salaries they had earned over the years as teachers.