Fashion in India


Fashion in India

India has a rich and varied textile heritage, where each region of India has its own unique costume native and traditional clothing. While traditional clothing is still worn by most of rural India, urban India is changing rapidly, and international fashion trends reflected in the young and glamorous and cosmopolitan metros of India. Fashion in India is a vibrant scene, an infant and a colorful and charming world where designers and models to start new trends every day.

Earlier, a master weaver was recognized for his skills, today's fashion designer is celebrated for its creativity. Young urban Indians can choose the best of East and West Indian designers have been inspired by both Indian and Western styles. This fusion fashion shows in the streets and ramps have become fashionable cities of India. Fashion in India is also beginning to make their mark on the international scene, such as accessories such as bindis (red dots worn on the forehead), Mehendi (henna designs made by applying and the palms of hands and other body parts), and bracelets, have gained international recognition, while holding fashion icons such as pop singers Madonna and Gwen Stephani.

Fashion in India has become a growing industry with international events such as Fashion Week in India and annual shows by fashion designers in major cities in India. The victories of a number of Indian beauty queens at international events such as Miss World and Miss Universe also made Indian models recognized worldwide. Fashion designers like Ritu Kumar, Ritu Beri, Rohit Bal, Rina Dhaka, Muzaffar Ali, Satya Paul, Abraham and Thakore, Tarun Tahiliani, JJ Valaya and Manish Malhotra are some famous fashion designers in India.

Fashion in India covers a range of clothing, clothing adorned designed for wedding ceremonies in lines ready, sports apparel and sportswear. Traditional Indian techniques of embroidery like Chikhani, tapestry and weaving traditional and zardosi and tissues have been used by Indian designers to create Indo-western clothing in a fusion of the best of East and West
                                       
Traditional dress in India vary widely depending on climate and natural fibers grown in a region. In the cold northern state of Jammu and Kashmir, people wear a thick loose shirt called a phiran to keep warm. In the tropical heat of southern India, men wear a sarong like garment called a mundu, while women drape 5 meters of cloth around their bodies in graceful folds of the sari. Saris are woven in silk, cotton and synthetic fibers. Kanjivaram, Mysore, Paithan, Pochampalli, Jamdani, Balucheri, Benarasi, Sambalpur, Bandhini are some varieties of beautiful saris from different parts of India. In arid Rajasthan and Gujarat men wrap and twist a length of fabric in the form of a dhoti around their lower limbs and a shirt-kurta as above. Colorful turbans complete the picture.

Fashion in India is evolving as new designers from leading institutes such as the National Institute of Fashion Technology continues to redefine the meaning of fashion in India

In the northern tribal societies, such Khasis, Nagas, Mizos, Manipur and Arunachal colorful woven sarong wear like clothing and woven shawls that represent the identity of each tribal group. In urban India, salwar kameez and churidar salwar is currently working women and sari is worn on formal occasions. Men wear kurtas and pajamas or formal wear Sherwani. Western wear such as shirts and pants are often worn by men across India. Jeans, T-shirts, capris, shorts and various forms of casual wear worn by young and old alike, which are precursors in fashion in India.

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