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Home >> >> Fashion in India >> >> Introduction
FASHION INDUSTRY IN INDIA
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||Indian Beauty Queens ||The
Glitterati of Indian Fashion World||
In Indian culture, the body is invested with various meanings. This is
reflected in its rich sculptural tradition where a language of poses as well
as hand and leg positions developed to convey specific messages. Decockrating
the body is yet another way of conveying meaning. Throughout Indian history,
the kinds of costumes and accessories worn can be seen to fulfill two
criteria: simplicity and opulence. In either instance, the choice of
clothing is dependent on the person's status, wealth and religious
orientation. Information about fashion in ancient India is available only
from looking at sculptures as very few examples of costumes, textiles and
jewellery have survived. In the Indus Valley Civilisation (c. 3000-1500 B.C.),
clothing tended to be simple. Men wore loin-clothes while women were bare to
the waist. Status was reflected in the kind of jewellery worn; high-ranking
women sometimes covered their bosoms with jewels. It was only with the
coming of the Aryans to India that more complicated clothing consisting of
the upper and lower garments was introduced, to which a cloak was added
later. These were generally pieces of cloth draped over the body in a style
seen in many Indian costumes today.
Ancient works like the Amarakosha
and the Brihat-kalpa-sutra mention a range of subjects including textiles
and garments. The range of sculptures and paintings at Ajanta give a clear
idea of the colours and patterns of garments, apart from the manner in which
these were worn. Several terms for the female upper garment were used in
Sanskrit and Prakrit literature including uttarasanga, uttariyavasan
uttariyavasa, udaramsbuka, samvyana, stanamsbuka and
stanottariya. There are
also numerous references in literature to stitched blouses or jackets, the
various names used for them including kancbuka, kanchulika, kurpasa and
kurpasaka.
The lower garment worn by women were also described by a
variety of names like ambara, amsbuka, antariya, jaghanamsbuka, nivasana,
paridbana, vasana, vastram, vasas and sauli. Texts of the 7th century
mention not only the tailor (tunnavaya or suchaka) but also his implements
like the needle (sucbi), sewing thread (sucbi sutra), and the scissors
(katiati). The Sakas and Kushans were the first to introduced turban, tunic,
trousers and heavy long coats to Indian costumes.
The total range of
costumes in India is considerably expanded between the 8th and the 12th
centuries. Interesting and useful accounts of geographers and chroniclers,
especially those of Arab and Chinese origin throw light on the Indian
costumes in vogue at different times in history. In their accounts, Masudi,
Idrisi and Ibn Hawqal speak of Indian cotton with a sense of wonder and awe.
With the arrival of the Mughals in the 16th century, new garments like qaba,
jama, piraban, lilucba, liba, kasaba and the like began to be used. These
kinds of costumes are also found illustrated in the historical works like
the Babar nama, the Tawatlkb-i-kbandan-i-Taimuriya and the
Tarikb-i-fi.
Abu'l Fazl provides probably the best documentation that we have of the
costumes of India from any single source prior to the 19th century. He
mentions that Akbar had replaced the names of several garments with new and
pleasing terms. His Ain-i-Akbari mentions that designers from Europe and the
Middle East used to frequent the Mughal courts. Muslin from undivided India
was an important commodity of export and a high fashion fabric in Europe and
other parts of the world.
Indian costumes like the silk saris,
brightly mirrored cholis, colorful lehangas and the traditional
salwar-kameez have fascinated many a traveller over the centuries. Although
sari is only one of the many traditional garments worn by women, yet it has
become the national dress of Indian women. The tightly fitted, short blouse
worn under a sari is a choli, which evolved as a form of clothing in 10th
century A.D. village women" Apart from the choli,
women in Rajasthan wear a form of pleated skirt known as the ghagra or
lehanga. Though the majority of Indian women wear traditional costumes, the
men in India can be found in more conventional western clothing. Shirts and
trousers are worn by men from all the regions of India. However, men in
villages wear traditional attires like kurtas, lungis, dhotis and
pyjamas.
Indian dressing styles are marked by many variations, both religious and
regional and one is likely to witness a plethora of colors, textures and
styles in garments worn by the Indians. Apart from this, the rich tradition
of Indian embroidery has long been made use of by fashion designers from
other countries. India prides in works like Zardozi, Dabka, brocades,
Pashmina, Jamawar and bandhni. It seems paradoxical that fashion is
considered a young concept in India since the first fashion show was held
only in 1958. Jeannie Naoroji wins the credit for initiating the first wave
of fashion shows in India and for giving a degree of professionalism to such
shows.
Since then, there has been growing consciousness among the
Indian men and women towards the fashion, styles and designs of the dresses
they wear. Several institutes like National Institute of Fashion Technology
(NIFT), Indian Institute of Fashion Technology (IIFT) and other fashion
academies have been established where the students are taught to translate
their creativity into dresses and fabric designs. The media has also played
an important role in the fashion boom. Good coverage is provided to the
fashion world and several magazines are specifically devoted only to the
fashion scene. The proliferation of fashion-based programmes on the
satellite television channels has increased the consciousness of the average
Indian masses about the changing trends in the global fashion.
In the
past one decade the Indian fashion industry has moved from the embryonic
stage to a blossoming take-off. Fashion designers have contributed
substantially to the spread of fashion as a driving force, both among Indian
consumers and select segments of Western markets. India can now boast of
dozens of leading fashion designers, who can match any European fashion
designer in their concepts, styles and designs. Ritu Beri, Rohit Bal, Ritu
Kumar, Abraham and Thakore, Deepika Govind, Gitanjali Kashyap, Indira
Broker, J.J.Valaya, Lina Tipnis, Manoviraj Khosla, Pavan Aswani, Payal Jain,
Ravi Bajaj, Rina Dhaka, Sharon Leong and Chandrajit Adhikari, Shaina NC,
Sonali and Himanshu, Wendell Rodricks, Anna Singh, Ashish Soni, Jatin
Kochar, Madhu Jain, Manish Malhotra, Ravi Bajaj, Salim Asgarally and Tarun
Tahlliani top the growing list of reputed fashion designers in India.
Fashion and dress-designing goes in tandem with professional ramp
modeling. In India ramp modeling has come of age with a rapidly growing
genre of professional ramp models, both male and female, making a mark in
domestic as well as international arenas. Madhu Sapre, Helen Brodie, Bipasha
Basu, Nayanika Chatterjee, Nina Manuel, Annie Thomas, Anupama Verma, Liza
Ray, Malaika Arora, Maria Goretti, Meher Jesia, Namrata Barua, Sheetal
Mallar, Sherie Meher Homji, Sonali Rosario and Ujwala Rawat are among the
leading female models of India while Milind Soman, Andrew Piers, Arjun
Rampal, Atul Wokulu, Himanshu Malik, Marc Robinson, Rahul Dev and Rohit Ticu
are among the leading male models.
Now more and more leading fashion
designers like Ritu Beri, Rina Dhaka and others are concentrating on Indian
wear and trying to revive India's glorious fabric and design traditions. As
the best of designs, motifs, themes and skilled craftsmen are available in
India and Indian fabrics and styles are best suited for the country, such
efforts seem quite logical. As a result we find more and more men and women
adopting the swadeshi clothes and designs. The Sherwanis, Jodhpuris, Nehru
jackets, shawls and Kurta-pyjamas have all sprang back as the "latest
designer-wear" among men. Similar revival is evident in women's costumes.
Several Indian designers are also launching ranges that are easy on the
pocket of ordinary masses. The Indian designers are also found to take up
social themes like the cause of environment in their designer wear.
Today the fashion designers from India have created a lasting impression on
the world market and boast of clients in the Middle East, UK and USA. Ravi
Bajaj has designed various fashion lines for export houses targeting the US
and European markets. Ritu Beri has an outlet at the prestigious Regent
Street in London and in New Jersey in U.S.A. Indian designers like Gitanjali
Kashyap, Rohit Bal and others frequently participate in fashion shows
abroad. Interestingly an Indian shawl and a salwar-kameez ensemble, created
by leading Mumbai couturiers Abu Jani and Sandeep Khosla, fomed part of the
exotic wardrobe of French actress Sophie Marceau in the latest James Bond
adventure "The World Is Not Enough", which was released earlier this year.
||Indian Beauty Queens ||The
Glitterati of Indian Fashion World||
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