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Sunday, 9 July 2006

High fashion in Kabul

From Reuters: "Afghanistan gets first fashion show in decades"

KABUL - Models strode down a catwalk in the Afghan capital Kabul for the first time in decades this weekend as two designers showed off their clothes behind the guarded walls of a luxury hotel.

An audience of expatriates and well-heeled Afghan watched the show in hotel garden, under a clear midsummer night’s sky, to the strains of traditional Afghan music.

All of the models showing the conservatively cut clothes that included designer burqas were expatriate women, to the disappointment of some in the audience.

The organisers said they did not want to court controversy in what is a deeply conservative Muslim country by having Afghan models.

[...]

Sherzad said people used to hold small fashion shows in Kabul before the war begin in the late 1970s. 

These days there was a market for fashion in the city, although it may not be obvious, she said.

“There’s not much in terms of the fashion we see in the West but there is fashion within a private environment, within the houses,” she said.

“People like to be fashionable.”  

Actually, I could care less most of the time. Jeans, a t-shirt, and sandals are fine by me. But that's not the only reason a "designer burqa" just doesn't sound appealing.
Posted on 07/09/2006 3:17 PM by Marisol Seibold
Comments
9 Jul 2006
Send an emailRebecca Bynum
There was a funny commercial that ran here in the states before the fall of the Berlin wall about a Russian fashion show. The models looked exactly the same - frumpy housedress with headscarf - with broom or without.

No one would dare do Muslim fashion show, but I've often thought how funny it would be.




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