A model wears Hussain Rehar and the designer backstage with his models at PFDC Sunsilk Fashion Week | Faisal Farooqui@Dragonfly
Apparently, they are all getting snapped up by the local high street for ready-to-wear and unstitched fabric. In fact, designer Hassan Shehryar Yasin observes, “Shut the fashion schools and more than half the high street brands in the market will shut down.”
“Creative, fresh, fashion and textile graduates are truly the wheels currently steering the high street,” says designer Zara Shahjahan, whose eponymous label dabbles into multiple design territories, traversing couture, ready-to-wear and high in demand unstitched lines. “There is quite literally a war going on when PIFD students display their final theses collections because every designer wants to immediately hire the really creative graduates. Within my own design house, about half of my team is from NCA and the other half is from PIFD.”
One of the main reasons why young graduates are opting for jobs rather than launching their own label is that the latter option has simply become too expensive. Designer Adnan Pardesy — who has also regularly taught at IVSAA — remembers that when he first started off his career back in 2003, fresh out of AIFD, he just had a single tailor and embroiderer working with him. “Now, a debutante designer needs space for a workshop and enough money to invest into fashion week participation fees and social media marketing,” he says.
On the flipside, a job with a successful high street brand can prove to be quite profitable. Waleed Zaman, Kayseria’s Creative Director, says, “The starting salary of a new designer tends to be somewhere between 45,000 rupees and 55,000 rupees in most cases. But as a designer puts in more years into a company, the job perks and salary increase and a decade of experience can lead up to a salary between 350,000 rupees and 400,000 rupees.
“The growth of the high street has been instrumental in getting fashion designing to be perceived as a respectable, lucrative career and made more jobs available to young fashion students,” he continues. “A lot of times, a promising designer may lack the business acumen to run a label of his or her own. By joining into a well-established brand with an efficient infrastructure and offering a good pay package, the designer can focus simply on his or her creativity.”
Regardless, designers working for a brand are required to mould their aesthetics to the design’s ideology. “Only recently, we had to let go of one of our brightest recruits because his preference was more towards Western silhouettes while our brand has always had definitive Eastern roots,” confirms Waleed.
Designer Yahsir Waheed, who has been working with the PIFD ever since its inception, says that fashion schools generally advise young graduates to work for at least two years with a brand before they decide on whether or not they want to fly solo. “That way they learn the ropes, gain some business sense and, if needed, collect the finances required to launch their own labels.”
But in the process, young designers trained to push the sartorial envelope while in school inevitably end up curbing their creativity. Does this creativity take a permanent backseat once they are settled into cushy jobs? Do most of them even want to make a big break into fashion?
Designing realities
“When we were in college, we all used to think that we’d graduate and become the next big designer,” recalls Jannat Gul Tarar, a Bachelors in Fashion graduate from PIFD’s class of May 2018, who is now part of the design team at high street brand Generation. “When we graduate, we realise that it’s not easy to start out on your own. You need space, workers, machinery and enough capital to advertise. I joined Generation thinking that I would work here for a while and then leave to launch my own label. But now, I love the environment, I get paid well and I don’t think that I would want to give all that up and risk starting my own brand. Most of the graduates I know feel the same way.”
Fajar Sajid, another fashion graduate from PIFD’s class of May 2018, is currently working with designer Faraz Manan. “I wanted to work with Faraz Manan because I really like his aesthetic and I knew that I would learn a lot from him. I have also interned with Sana Safinaz in the past. I just think that it’s really important to get work experience and develop my own identity before launching my own brand.”
Up till last year, new designers wanting to make their mark would be given a taste of the spotlight via the Bank Alfalah Rising Talent omnibus at the biannual fashion weeks orchestrated by the Pakistan Fashion Design Council (PFDC) and Fashion Pakistan Council (FPC) in Lahore and Karachi, respectively. Capsule collections of promising young designers would be showcased and, while they were often hit and miss, the shows did prove to be a launch-pad for bright sparks such as Hira Ali, Hamza Bokhari and Maheen Taseer. Both councils were fond of referring to how the show promoted ‘fashion’s future.’ But ever since the main sponsor backed out last year, no announcement has been made about continuing with the platform.
“It’s important that fashion councils continue to support young talent,” points out Imrana Shehryar, Head of Textile Design at IVSAA. “A few — or even one — talented designers can be singled out every season, perhaps in collaboration with fashion schools, and they could be allowed a free slot at fashion week and be mentored by senior designers.”
The dean of IVSAA, Shehnaz Ismail, adds, “The industry has a responsibility to fashion schools to take students on board and help them gain direction.”
The council angle