STYLE: MARCHING TO HER OWN DRUMBEAT
Mahgul Rashid made her debut on Pakistan’s fashion landscape in 2013 and from the very beginning, there was never anything commonplace about her. She may have had her fans as well as her critics but you couldn’t deny that Mahgul was different — in the fish-scale embroideries that she once etched on to a wedding-wear collection, in the chinoiserie prints that she merged with embellishment in a formal line, in the memorable accessories she created to complement the clothes in past fashion shows, and in mixing animal prints, bar codes and butterfly wings. Mahgul, new though she was, seemed to be very sure about her design ethos.
Somewhere down the road, though, she did make a beeline for the more commonplace. She tried to cater to the high-street, a market where safe, generic design tends to sell better than artistic creations. For a while, the Mahgul who had made such a splash with her first collection, seemed to have receded into the shadows. We’ll talk more about that later. More significantly, though, at the recently culminated PFDC L’Oreal Paris Bridal Week, she was back, once again marching to her own drumbeat.
The designer’s ‘Tales Of Bijin’ stood out on a catwalk that was weighed down by pastel-coloured, heavily-cancanned bridal atrocities. In contrast, Mahgul spun out dazzling colours, creating embellishments that were well thought-out — florals, following distinctive patterns, mingling occasionally with a phoenix, its magnificent wings splayed out, or geometrics laid-out in grids or mirrors, running in dainty paths down a shirt. It was wearable wedding-wear and, yet, with enough of a twist that made it stand out rather than blend in.
In an industry where many designers have shifted gears towards more commercial routes, creating beautiful, sellable but ultimately forgettable clothes, Mahgul is opting to do things her way
Bona fide designer-wear, after all, should stand out. In an industry where many designers have shifted gears towards more commercial routes, creating beautiful, sellable but ultimately forgettable clothes, Mahgul is opting to do things her way. “I can’t do them any other way,” she tells me. “I’m happy catering to a more niche, discerning clientele than creating clothes that don’t define my aesthetic.”
Do they sell well? “Yes, so far,” she smiles.