×
75 953
Fashion Jobs
ROSS
Store Protection Specialist
Permanent · Des Moines
ADIDAS
Project Manager, Stores & Operations
Permanent · PORTLAND
L'OREAL GROUP
Director- Global Business Development
Permanent · El Segundo
MARC JACOB'S
Sales Supervisor - Mall at Green Hills (Nashville)
Permanent · Nashville
HUDSON'S BAY
Receiver
Permanent ·
DESIGNER BRANDS
Dsw Stores Area Manager, Minneapolis South
Permanent · Roseville
UNDER ARMOUR
Account Rep, Team Sales
Permanent · BALTIMORE
QVC
Rtv (Return to Vendor) Expeditor
Permanent · WEST CHESTER
STADIUM GOODS
Consignment Specialist Nyc
Permanent · NEW YORK
NEWELL
Shipping Material Handler
Permanent · RENO
NEWELL
sr Manager, Supply Chain Strategy
Permanent · ATLANTA
MICHAEL KORS
Outlet Associate Manager, Citadel Outlet, ca
Permanent · Los Angeles
URBN
Free People Senior Buyer - Accessories
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
URBN
Free People Senior Buyer - Accessories
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
SALLY BEAUTY CORPORATE
00706 Color Consultant
Permanent · LOS ANGELES
SALLY BEAUTY CORPORATE
Salon Professional (Stylist)- Studio by Sally - 10813
Permanent · DENTON
MACY'S
Retail Fulfillment Associate, Temecula Promenade - Full Time
Permanent · Temecula
MACY'S
Asset Protection Detective, Rosedale Center - Full Time
Permanent · Roseville
MACY'S
Asset Protection Captain, Alderwood - Full Time
Permanent · Lynnwood
MACY'S
Asset Protection Detective, Lenox Square - Full Time
Permanent · Atlanta
MACY'S
Asset Protection Security Guard, Los Angeles dt Broadway Plaza - Flex
Permanent · Los Angeles
MACY'S
Asset Protection Security Guard, Ala Moana - Flex
Permanent · Honolulu
By
AFP
Published
Sep 30, 2007
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Click here to print
Text size
aA+ aA-

Asian designers turning Paris fashion global

By
AFP
Published
Sep 30, 2007


A creation by Indian designer Manish Arora during the Spring/Summer 2008 ready-to-wear collection show in Paris
Photo : Francois Guillot/AFP
PARIS, Sept 30, 2007 (AFP) - Paris has long been the world's undisputed fashion capital but now it truly is going global, with ever more Asian designers opting to show here to grab a bigger share of the international market.

"I wanted to give myself a big challenge," Manish Arora told AFP after becoming the first Indian designer to present ready-to-wear in the French capital on Sunday.

Asked why he had defected from London where he has shown for four seasons, he said: "Let's face it, Paris is the city for fashion. I wanted a bigger audience, bigger press."

"I'll be here again next season," he said. "To stay among the big names is a real challenge."

"The world is getting smaller," says China's Frankie Xie of the Beijing-based Jefen label, in his second season here.

He has moved to Paris "because I think is a very good place to promote our brand, not just for the Chinese but also for the international market."

South Korea's Lie Sang Bong says he is encouraged by the inroads Asian designers are now making on the world fashion scene. "I think it is a great opportunity for cultural exchange," he said.

All three designers were among the first to present their collections for next spring-summer as fashion week opened here at the weekend.

Manish Arora's show was a rumbustuous mix of Andy Warhol-style Pop Art and traditional Indian handicraft, like Rajasthan mirrorwork, presented with Bollywood panache.

Lurid lime and shocking pink, with liberal doses of glitz, dominated his intricately hand-embroidered and sequin-encrusted silks and brocades depicting the moustachioed faces of Maharajas and sultry Maharanis -- which took 100 people over two months to prepare.

There was a definite 1970s hippie feel to the long tailored jackets and flares, and in the models' bouffant hairdos, backcombed and frazzled, their faces framed with day-glo alice bands which were picked up in the strobe lights.

Xie dedicated his show to the upcoming Beijing Olympics.

"I do a lot of sport and many of my friends do sport. China's swift economic development means many more people are wanting to play sports. Because of the Olympics I hope in the next year that sports clothing will develop on the international market," he said.

But his take on sportswear was decidedly tongue-in-cheek, not suited for anything more strenuous than the disco floor, let alone the athletics track.

The models dangled fake-fur boxing gloves in day-glo pink or baby blue as they teetered down the catwalk in towering patent leather stilettos with anklets, some of them further hobbled by tassels in the heels.

The overall look was sportily chic: a plethora of cropped leggings, striped ankle socks, hoodies and shiny satin tracksuit tops, and jumpsuits in turquoise, lemon and lime, with witty accessories like matching water bottles.

For outside, he showed anoraks, trenchcoats and hooded overalls with drawstrings in a crinkled, glazed fabric.

While there was little intrinsically Chinese about the Jefen collection, Lie Sang Bong was not afraid to show his Korean roots, whether in his delicate prints of trees and blossoms transferred by laser onto silk chiffon and satin gowns, or in the calligraphy only just discernible on an anthracite sequinned jacket.

His inspiration for the collection was the 1920s Bauhaus era, so all his models wore tiny black Juliet caps and many of the designs were sculptural, almost architectural in concept.

Cocktail frocks assembled from varying sizes of discs in stiffened silk which trembled as the models walked were a feat, if somewhat Michelin man in effect.

by Sarah Shard

Copyright © 2023 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.