LFW dedicates a day to India Textiles to promote use of traditional fabric

The Lakme Fashion Week (LFW) 2015 dedicates a day to Indian textiles. The day started with prominent designers Raghavendra Rathore, Sabyasachi Mukherjee and Anita Dongre being lauded by Textile Commisioner Sajay Kumar Panda for their continuous contribution to promote Indian textile and handloom, as well as discussions on how they can be popularised as a new style statement among fashion-conscious youth.

Mukherjee, one of most influential names in the world of fashion, appealed to all corporates in India to set aside a day for Indian wear. He said that it would be great if Indian youth could wear textiles and make a revolution.

The felicitation ceremony was followed by the first show of the day by young designers Ujjawal Dubey, Divya Seth, Mayank Anand and Shraddha Nigam.

With two timeless fabrics as their base, Mayank and Shraddha presented their “Chauraha” collection at the ongoing edition at Hotel Palladium here.
The duo used fabrics like Dhonekali from West Bengal that is normally found in the pallav. They also showcased a modern interpretation of the gamcha, an unstitched fabric or garment mostly used in north India in the summers to protect the wearer from heat and dust.

The designing duo used them in a colour palette of black, white and red checked pattern along with hand woven cotton that created a fashionable stir on the runway as the models glided down. From interesting draped tunics and dresses to cowl pants and striking tops, the collection made optimum use of these two very humble textiles.

Divya Seth gave eco-organic fabrics a deluxe royal touch through her line “Sultana on Safari”.
Aimed at the jet-setting global traveller who believes in sustainable fashion, the designer kept her fabric choice pure handspun and woven Khadi, organic silk and silk chiffon, which were given an innovative touch with traditional reinvented Kalamkari and Ajrakh in natural dyes.

Ujjawal’s ‘Antar-Agni’ label offered men’s and women’s wear collection. The designer opted for handwoven khadi, linen net, linen satin blends, cotton linen and added faux leather and organza for accents on clothes.
Detailing gave the men’s wear a new age feel as wide salwars, one-button collarless jackets, long knee length Sherwani, and cross-over kurta revealed some comfortable options.

The women’s wear looks started with a relaxed panelled anarkali with an organza inset at the sides, moved to a cross-over top worn with slashed and layered pants, a cowl draped toga top and a very innovative pant-skirt.

The Indian Textile day at LFW witnessed innovative use of traditional fabrics to entice youth to wearing Indian textile.

Recent Posts

PolyU develops soft magnetorheological textiles for smart wearables

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) has developed new soft magnetorheological textiles that could have wide applications in future smart…

12 hours ago

Levi Strauss launches clothing repair program

Levi Strauss has introduced a new clothing repair initiative designed to encourage high school students to take an active role…

12 hours ago

Anaphe launches a luxury denim-inspired silk collection

Silk clothing and accessories brand Anaphe is unveiling ReWritten, a collection that reimagines denim using silk, femininity and effortless modern…

2 days ago

BGMEA, ActionAid to promote growth in garment industry

BGMEA has signed MoU with ActionAid Bangladesh to work together in supporting the sustainable transformation of the country’s readymade garment…

2 days ago

Rimaks introduces resin-based finishing technique for denims

Rimaks has partnered with SM Denim to introduce BodyCast, a resin-based finishing technique that gives priority to the natural shape…

2 days ago

Deven Supercriticals unveils waterless dyeing technology

Deven Supercriticals has unveiled the commercial-scale operation of SUPRAUNO, marking a major milestone in the transition toward sustainable textile dyeing.

3 days ago