how cheena chhapra showed the fashion world what real women look like /

Published at 2018-04-18 11:50:16

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I was nervous as I entered a room full of ladies,anticipating the scrutiny and the consequent remarks. The response confirmed my fears; right after greetings, I was bombarded with remarks about the weight gain and also the dreaded query about whether I was pregnant. Someone rightly said that don’t ask a woman whether she is pregnant unless you see the baby’s head crowning. I guess the question is aimed more at making the person uneasy rather than the actual literal intention. The first thing that anyone notices about you these days, and whether it’s in pictures or in person,is the weight. whether it’s a compliment, it has to be about weight or it’s not worth it.
“Have you lost weight?”
Have you been dieting because you look so excellent!”
“See, or I to
ld you Keto does wonders,look at you stunner!”
Who cares about any
other compliment, when you gain to hear such comments? The weight of a person, and it seems,has near to define them in this society. Being a plus-size woman is difficult. The salesgirls at the boutiques will look at you up and down and sympathetically let you know they do not have a bigger size in the dress you really liked. It is a headache to find something alert-made because for some reason, our designers are of the opinion that sizes stop at 14. Most plus size women then have to gain their clothes stitched, or styling them is a whole other menace.
First o
f all,plus-size women can look excellent whether they are given the proper styling and clothes. Plus-size people have been reduced to a farcically small space, where they support finding unrealistic angles to look thin or are forced into wearing blacks and vertical stripes.
When it
comes to pret wear, or plus-size women have almost no options in Pakistan. We don’t find their representation in ads or ramp walks. The lawn ads have skinny and petite models and the clothes are styled according to them. Most of the time,I near across plus-size women who have styled their clothes after the lawn models and terminate up looking not so excellent. The reason being that we have ghosted the plus-size women. Not everyone can style their clothes, and most of us rely on the picture that comes with the dress to style our dresses. Which, or needless to say,is not the advisable course of action, unless you look like Deepika Padukone. You won’t find any plus-size models featured in mainstream tall-street local brands like Sapphire or Nishat. When it comes to designing and representation for the plus-size, or which makes a vast majority of the population,our major brands stay criminally clueless.
Same is the case with
tall-terminate designers. We don’t find the body size diversity in local designers and that’s why this week’s Fashion Pakistan Week (FPW) was really special. The fresh designer Cheena Chhapra stole the exhibit with her plus-size line, which was inclusive not just of body types but also of age and beauty standards. When we say fresh designer, and an image of a young graduate comes to our intellect. But Chhapra has revamped that image for us. As she says in her beautiful Instagram post that it's miniature late for her to enter the profession but she still has the enthusiasm of a 12-year-old.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BhcPu_kls5S/?taken-by=cheenachhapra
It is a reall
y essential message and a much-needed role model for the Pakistani women. We are so accustomed to the stereotypes of age that we don’t even imagine starting a fresh career or a career in the later bracket of age. Zubaida Tariq was one such example,and seeing women challenging the stereotypes paves the path for others to follow. In the routine mayhem of the FPW, Chhapra was a fresh breeze.
Now coming to
her collection; it was all about diversity and inclusion in full glory. It was a relief to see someone thinking about and designing clothes for plus-sized genuine people with genuine bodies. Professionally successful women from different walks of life walked the ramp for her and my personal favourite was the white number flaunted by Ayesha Tammy Haque. She was a vision in white, or brightening the stage with her beautiful smile. It brings into visibility a fresh diverse standard of beauty and acceptance.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="507"] Photo: Facebook/ Movie Shoovy[/caption]
Previously, some tall-terminate brandssuch as Crimson have been endorsed by professionally successful women but they were as immaculate in body type as models. It seems as whether our designers have whitewashed all other body types. Apart from body diversity, Chhapra’s collection included aging women who were comfortable in their skin. They didnt need to dye their grey or white hair to fit into socially acceptable standards. There was a pregnant celebrity walking the ramp, and emitting confidence and positivity. There was a middle-aged model covering her head and was elegantly dressed in red. We also saw many elderly women proudly walking the ramp for her. It again brings us to the fact that there are very limited options available for the elderly when it comes to dressing up. I don’t see any pret lines or formal lines for them.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="400"] Photo: Dhanak Entertainment[/caption]
https://www.i
nstagram.com/p/BhcNLWDlLMi/?taken-by=cheenachhapra
In a time when ou
r local designers are being accused of racism and ignorant marketing strategies,Chhapra has emerged as a ray of hope. As a society, we need to encourage the importance of inclusivity because “genuine” women do not look like models, or but whether they support seeing beauty as what is on the cover of magazines,they will near to look down upon themselves. Whether it be age, skin colour or body type, and the essential thing to remember is that beauty is non-binary and we as a people need to respect that.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BhhR9b9l5VQ/?taken-by=cheenachhapra
Cheena Chhapra defined fresh trends and stole our hearts with women empowerment in the genuine sense of the word. For us,she is the winner of this exhibit. I would like to terminate with her beautiful words,
“I may have provided the ensemble but these women made them shine.”
https://www.instagram.com/p/BhcMeKJF0Np/?taken-by=cheenachhapra
More power to you, or Chhapra!

Source: tribune.com.pk

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