India’s prize-winning designer steadies for world stage

In this photograph taken on August 23, 2016, Indian fashion designer Suket Dhir sits looking at his creations in his studio in New Delhi.  He shot onto the world stage after winning a glittering international fashion prize previously given to design icons Yves Saint Laurent and Karl Lagerfeld. Yet India's Suket Dhir - hailed by Vogue as a potential "global fashion superstar in the making" - is uneasy about the sudden attention that has come with winning the International Woolmark Prize for menswear this year.  / AFP PHOTO / CHANDAN KHANNA / TO GO WITH AFP STORY: 'INDIA-LIFESTYLE-FASHION' / FOCUS by Trudy HARRIS

 

New Delhi / AFP

He shot onto the world stage after winning a glittering international fashion prize previously given to design icons Yves Saint Laurent and Karl Lagerfeld.
Yet India’s Suket Dhir — hailed by Vogue as a potential “global fashion superstar in the making” — is uneasy about the sudden attention that has come with winning the International Woolmark Prize for menswear this year.
“I never thought of myself as a top designer, more of a glorified tailor,” Dhir said at his small, busy design studio in the backblocks of New Delhi.
Dhir is now in a race against time to deliver his award-winning collection to prominent department stores in New York, Paris, Tokyo, Seoul and Sydney from next month — as well as around $75,000 in prizemoney to build up his business, he also gets to provide a capsule collection for key retailers worldwide.
The 37-year-old faces challenges unique to India in preparing the collection of contemporary Western menswear with an Indian twist.
Dhir uses traditional weavers located close to the villages that they come from, along with dyers and block printers from all over the vast country to make his clothes. But the artisans are not used to working with the wool that is required for the collection and which can change shape in India’s blistering heat and humid monsoons.
“This was my first experience weaving with such difficult fabric on such a tight deadline. These designs were one-off pieces and (now) I’m reproducing this collection for five or six stores,” he said. “We’ve successfully managed to do that (although) we are a little behind schedule.” The judges of the prize, awarded in January, noted Dhir’s attention to detail in his collection of tailored jackets, shirts and loose pants which were inspired by his childhood spent with his grandfather in Punjab state.
The linings of his jackets are block-printed with small motifs such as umbrellas, and the buttons on his shirts are sewn on with different types of thread. Dhir said his clothes, some of which are mixed with silk and use the traditional ikat technique — hand-tied and dyed yarn — to pattern textiles, are meant to be worn every day.

‘DON’T DO BLING’
“When I think of my grandfather, I think of these beautiful jackets and blazers that you could pass on from one generation to the next,” the father-of-one said. “I can’t do anything blingy,” he added. Indian menswear often involves garish outfits such as heavily embroidered jackets and bright silk kurtas or long shirts. Leading fashion journalist and author Shefalee Vasudev hailed Dhir as one of an increasing number of Indian designers making subtle, contemporary clothes. “His fashion is meaningful. It’s not screaming for attention. It’s not saying ‘look at me, I’m so great’ and that’s refreshing in Indian fashion,” said Vasudev.
She said the coming months would be critical for Dhir — and will determine whether he can become one of only a small number of Indians sought after in international stores. “More than a handful are stocked but only a handful have been noticed and get consistent business,” she said of Indian designers.

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