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Autumnal hues now

The Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week is set to usher in another season



Black and bold The colour palettes at the WIFW are likely to tilt towards the darker shades

Fashion Weeks come like clockwork. Before the dust settles, controversies die slowly and shipments finally sail for destinations, the next season is ready to conquer the ramps. When business rules, designers do not have much of a choice.

The brave hearts put their creativity to test every six months.

Matching a season’s pre-requisites with buyer demands and yet staying rooted to domestic realities is a dicey game.

“It is a tightrope walk. It is important to set a balance,” says designer Payal Jain.

However when the ramps light up, everything takes a back seat. The pomp, shimmer and glamour sweep across and the show and personalities take over.

The Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week Autumn/Winter 2008 is on at the Pragati Maidan. The Fashion Design Council of India has persisted with the venue after Spring/Summer 07, but Director General Rathi Vinay Jha refuses to see it as a move to make it a permanent location.

“We have to make the best of what we have. Pragati Maidan has been booked for three fashion weeks after this,” says Jha, adding that sticking to the venue depends on its availability.

Designers like FDCI President Ashish Soni are excited about showcasing at the venue for the first time. He is among the many heavyweights who gave the last WIFW a miss.

The big names are back on the ramp this time, be it J.J Valaya, Suneet Varma, Ritu Kumar or Manish Arora.

Veterans like Tarun Tahiliani, Rohit Bal, Rina Dhaka and Rajesh Pratap Singh are among the 60 designers who will have models catwalk in their creations.

A few debutants at the last show are among the 84 designers who are part of the WIFW now. Going by their “gut-feeling” Lecoanet Hemant, who kept away from WIFW earlier, make their debut.

If the venue was the topic of discussion last time, it is FDCI’s decision to divide designers into heritage/synthesis, contemporary and creator categories, that is debated upon at Autumn/Winter 08.

The designers are divided about the impact of this categorisation. While some vouch it will aid buyers and designers, other agree the confusion will take a while to settle.

While the move is considered buyer-centric, Soni points out it will help the layman.

The shows are scheduled to put designers working under a category together. “It will assist the buyers, but will also make trend-spotting easier for the layman and the media,” says Soni.

The move will streamline designers too, feels Payal. A few like, youngster Abhijeet Khanna, found making a choice difficult as his creations blurred the creative and contemporary categories.

However, the organisational aspects aside, the event is also meant to do some forecasting for the coming winter.

The colour palettes, as expected for Fall, are meant to tilt towards the darker shades, with blacks, browns and greys.

The appearance will be more built-up, with turtle necks, tapering trousers, capes and hoods. Accessories, be it boots or bags, are also expected to be big.

P. ANIMA

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