Top Designers Revamp Islamic Overgarments
Claire Rosemberg | June 29, 2009
Models present designer abayas in Paris. (Photo: Pierre Verdy, AFP)
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Ahead of the Paris couture shows, top designers have joined a tricky exercise to glam up one of the world’s most traditional pieces, the abaya — the long black overgarment worn by millions of Arab women.
Unveiled the same week that French President Nicolas Sarkozy unleashed a storm across the Arab world for criticizing the head-to-toe burka for women, the score of just-completed jazzed-up designer abayas are to be offered to the Saudi royal family by Saks Fifth Avenue of Riyadh and Jeddah.
The presentation of the madeover abayas, held this week at the luxury George V hotel owned by a Saudi prince, seemed just another catwalk show in the world’s fashion capital, but within minutes became a scene out of the Arabian Nights.
To music and amid a cloud of smoke, a mighty grey Arabian horse pranced into the ornate underground reception hall mounted by a Russian red-head riding side-saddle and clad in a rhinestone and sequinned shawl designed by John Galliano for the Saks collection. Following the horse came a score of models parading the abayas, each of them black but each very different.
Other couturiers taking part in the scheme include French houses Nina Ricci and Jean Claude Jitrois, Italy’s Blumarine and Alberta Feretti, Australian Martin Grant and US designer Caroline Herrera.
“I realized that women in Saudi Arabia wear designer brands but outside have to cover up in a black abaya,” said organizer Dania Tarhini, who is Lebanese and the general manager of Saks Fifth Avenue, Saudi Arabia.
“I wanted them to be able to wear something with pleasure, not just as an obligation,” she said.
But Tarhini, who has worked for the company since 2001, said it had been difficult to get Western designers on board.
“At first the designers were not that enthusiastic, they didn’t really understand, they couldn’t imagine how to make a designer abaya,” she said. “So I sent them abayas, explained that the concept was to link fashion with culture.
“I said that the same women who wear their designer evening gowns will wear their abayas.”
Upcoming Portugese designer Felipe Oliveira Baptista, one of the dozen taking part in the Paris couture shows starting early July, said that updating the traditional abaya had been a challenge.
“It was interesting to work on a garment that has very specific rules,” he said. Abayas traditionally are black, body-covering and floor-length.
His was a patchwork of three different black fabrics, cut to lengthen the body. Others came with shimmering Swarosky crystals, gold, velvet or pearl embroidery.
“It was not an easy exercise,” said French designer Anne-Valerie Hash. “We were all very afraid.”
The one-off pieces paraded in Paris are to be given as gifts to the royal family and other VIPs, but by September Tarhini plans to have a selection of designer abayas on hand at the boutiques for between 1,500 and 1,800 euros (about $2,000-$2,500).
New collections, to be created twice yearly, will hopefully introduce some color. “Navy blue, or dark brown, perhaps,” Hash said.
Agence France-Presse
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