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Four designers, all women, took a proud bow together at the Gen Next show on Day 1 of the Lakme Fashion Week (LFW) Summer/Resort 2019 here on Wednesday.
Mumbai-based Madhumita Nath was an exception for the Gen Next show, which usually has talent in the age group of 20 to 30. Madhumita is 40, and it stands to show how the LFW platform is being more inclusive.
"It was great to see women power on the stage... It may have been the first time that four women designers were on the Gen Next stage. I think as women, we have a different sensibility, and a different way in which we want to work.
"I would like to believe women would know how to drape a woman better," Madhumita told IANS here.
The designer, who has a label 'Ek Katha', showcased a line called 'Bliss'. A textile design graduate from the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad, Madhumita used weavers from Kutch and Odisha to create a cotton-based textile, and then used natural dyes.
#LFWDay1: #LFWSR19 is off to a great start as @INIFDCORPORATE presents #GenNext winners, featuring debut collections by Ek Katha , Birdwalk, Sunaina Khera and Ujjwala Bhadu #LFWSR19 #5DaysOfFashion #lfw #allInclusiveatLFW #Proud2bdesigner pic.twitter.com/tQe1n74LYR— Lakmé Fashion Week (@LakmeFashionWk) January 30, 2019
Her ensembles on the ramp were a serene mix of natural, beige, raw white, mocha and soft yellow, all embellished with organic prints. The silhouettes were kept very relaxed, laid-back and bohemian.
There was also Delhi-based Amrapali Singh, who thinks it was "pretty amazing" to have a bouquet of women for the Gen Next show, which in the past has given the Indian design community names like Rahul Mishra, Aneeth Arora, Masaba Gupta and Nachiket Barve to name a few.
Amrapali's 'Queen of Hearts' collection under her label Birdwalk was all about simple, comfort and playful appeal inspired by the pack of cards. With Giza cotton, net, cotton silk organza and silk chiffon as the base, she limited the colour story to red, white and black.
Chic and wearable, the line had mono prints, hand and machine embroidery, fun patches, scallops, stripes and lace, added to the design elements of the collection.
With an experience of three years in the industry, she says she was finding a way to make it work.
The Gen Next show, she told IANS, is a "ready recipe which shows this is what you could do".
Both the designers, along with Sunaina Khera and Ujjwala Bhadu, formed the 27th batch of Gen Next designers presented by INIFD.
Sunaina, who has a celebrity client list of Bollywood stars like Sonam K. Ahuja and Kriti Sanon, interned with couturier Gaurav Gupta. Her collection called 'A Long Way Home' was an expression of grief.
As for Ujjwala, who has studied fashion in New York and interned with Bibhu Mohapatra, Oscar de la Renta, Theory and Philip Lim, her collection in vibrant hues was a fusion of cultures and crafts with textiles which were merged with colour and silhouettes that resulted in a fun but functional and wearable line of clothes.
Knitwear was the star of the collection for fitted dresses and tops.
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