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 Amazing Nepali Fashion Designer
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Posted on 01-03-10 9:05 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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FACE IN THE CROWD: Prabal Gurung – In the fashion world


BY KASHISH DAS SHRESTHA 



Not many people in Nepal know who Prabal Gurung is. More importantly, even the ones who have heard his name in passing may not know what it is that he does, exactly. Prabal doesn’t mind. He is humble and accepts that the road he is walking on has long ways to go still. At $300 for a simple top, to $10,000 plus for dresses and gowns, that haute couture road doesn’t really run through Kathmandu, Nepal in any case. 


In short, Prabal is the Creative Director & CEO of his self-titled New York based fashion line Prabal Gurung. He is a rising star in the fashion industry in the fashion capital of the world. His brand, less than a year old, already sell alongside iconic fashion houses like Oscar De La Renta, Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent and Valentino, in luxury stores like Bloomingdales (New York and South Coast Plaza) and DNA (Riydah) amongst others, while his Spring 2010 collection is going to be available in more outlets of this category. 


“Nothing in life is just coincidence,” Prabal insists, sitting inside a café on a cool fall evening in New York’s Lower East Side. It is easy to see why he feels so strongly about it; to him he is a living testament. Establishing a high-end fashion house in New York is no easy feat by any means. “And it may only look simple because I enjoy doing it so much,” he explains. Agreed. 


When asked to explain what the New York Times review meant when they noted the ‘tailoring’ in his first season (February 2009), Prabal happily launches into a fairly complex explanation that involves meticulous mathematical equations which would basically result in a product that could elicit the kind of observation The Times made. Neither his level of enthusiasm nor the technical facet of his answers waver when asked about the ‘draping’ The Times complimented in review of his Spring 2010 collection, or about how luxury brands price their products. 


Inside this jeans, t-shirt and sneakers wearing young designer with a laid back persona is also a geeky accountant and a perfectionist relentlessly working towards a dream. 



The Cautionary Tale 


“I was a cautionary tale in Kathmandu,” Prabal says, somewhat still amused. Not hard to imagine: after all, he was a young man in a high school in Nepal in the 1990s who wanted to grow up to be a fashion designer and loved to party. 


“But I always knew what I wanted to do.” 


Still, even in his late adolescent years, Prabal had been questioned about his ‘life plans.’ At one social gathering in Nepal, someone asked him what he “really” wanted to do with his life, and not just this “hobby” of his. 


Does he feel vindicated now? 


“It doesn’t even matter.” 


It doesn’t. 


For Nepalis, it is a natural tendency to immediately look at Prabal, or any one who achieves success and happens to be of Nepali heritage, in a purely Nepali context. On top of that, with Prabal, not only is he the only Nepali to achieve this level of success, but also this kind of success. 


Still, Prabal is not a Nepali designer. He is a designer who happens to be Nepali. His success did not stem out of his nationality, rather his nationality only became relevant to Nepalis precisely because of what he has achieved professionally. 


What Prabal is, is a world-class designer with an astute sense of business. He has ambitions and plans out how he hopes to achieve them, and while he is very careful he is not scared to make mistakes. 


“I knew going to New York could have easily been a mistake,” he recalls of the time when he decided he would leave his career in India and go to the prestigious Parsons school for design at The New School University in New York. “But it would have been my mistake and I could live with that.” 


At the time, he had already studied at New Delhi’s National Institute of Fashion Technology, and worked on major design projects in India, traveling to other countries for work. When he met the famous Delhi-based Indian designer Manish Arora, he had hoped to intern with him but ended up taking up a job offer.


“I could have launched my own brand in India at that time, but I knew it wasn’t the kind of designing work I wanted to do,” he adds. Parsons, he knew, could eventually enable him to do the kind of designing work that he did want to do. 


The Rise of the Intern 


In New York, landing an internship can be a brutally fierce competition between fashion students from the city’s friendly rival fashion schools — Parsons and Fashion Institute of Technology. Prabal won one such competition almost immediately after starting at Parsons in 1999. He meticulously packaged his application and included everything he thought would give him an edge over other applicants– he wasn’t taking chances because Donna Karan wanted only one intern. “Internship is a very important and humbling experience,” he adds, still pleased with his own experiences. When his internship ended, they gave him several boxes full of fabrics as a parting gift. 


“These were the best possible fabrics around, expensive stuff, and I used them all the way up to my final designs at Parsons,” he explains. 


At Parsons, Prabal excelled in all classes. The school website’s alumni page proudly lists: “Prabal Gurung, 2000, AAS Fashion Design. Named best designer in the Fusion show his senior year, he joined Cynthia Rowley’s design house at her request.” 


Soon enough, he was Design Director at the legendary American fashion house, Bill Blass. When they shut down in December 2008, Prabal was well into his next move. 


Prabal Gurung, The Brand 


“I knew that 2009 was the year I wanted to launch my line. In my head that had been the plan all along,” the designer explains. It is pointless to guess otherwise. In February 2009 — two months after Bill Blass closed — Prabal launched his line — Prabal Gurung, at the New York Fashion Week. Fashion critics loved his collection. 


On April 30 earlier this year, actresses Demi Moore and Rachel Weisz both wore a Prabal Gurung dress each to the Cartier 100th Anniversary in America Celebration at Cartier Fifth Avenue Mansion, New York. 


In June, Demi Moore wore yet another Prabal Gurung dress, this time in Paris for the launch of her fragrance Wanted. On her twitter page, she wrote “wonderful young designer to look out for Prabal Gurung!” 


Prabal Gurung showed its Spring 2010 collection on the first day of the New York Fashion Week, on September 10 last month. When Women’s Wear Daily asked him what his plans were for after the Fashion Week, he was quoted as saying “to sell a lot.” Looks like things are going his way in that department — a feat on its own considering the fact that on many occasions, designers show for two seasons or more and still fail to secure distributors.  



The Product of Love (and Planning) 


The Fashion industry, a multi-billion dollar money machine, is just that – a money machine. Yet, when Prabal finally decided to launch his line in Spring 2009, he could call up people he had known and worked with over the years and “without any question” they joined his team. 


Goodwill, however, isn’t the only thing Prabal saved up on during his years in New York. Prabal Gurung, the high-couture fashion line, was completely funded by its namesake founder’s own earnings. 


“I am a product of the love and support of the industry,” Prabal says. “They were all waiting for me to do this, they knew I would, and that I could,” he explains of industry insiders who have been familiar with his work for a long time. 


His pressures of his position in the industry today do not seem to burden Prabal. Nor does he seem particularly worried about the process to reach his bigger dreams.


For a young man who is just in the first year of his own fashion line that every major fashion and luxury publication (Harper’s, Vogue, Elle, Style to name a few) from New York to Milan and London to Abu Dhabi and Hong Kong wants to write about, he is relaxed with a sense of being in control of the situation. He isn’t, however, over confident. 


“Look this is New York, it’s the fashion world,” he explains sipping through a straw a canned coke poured into a glass half filled with ice cubes. “There have been tons of designers who come in for a season or two, and then disappear. All this can go as fast as it comes.” 


Ref: http://beacononline.wordpress.com/2009/10/02/face-in-the-crowd-prabal-gurung-in-the-fashion-world/


 
Posted on 01-03-10 9:16 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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We Love ... Prabal Gurung
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Dresses from the fall collection.

Dresses from the fall collection.Photo: Courtesy of Prabal Gurung


Prabal Gurung was the breakout star of the spring 2010 shows. Picked as one of our Ones to Watch, we, along with every other editor in the city, flocked to his spring presentation. He's since dressed scores of celebs, from Demi Moore to Leighton Meester, and Oprah wears a red Prabal gown on the December cover of O, The Oprah Magazine. If that's not making it, what is? On top of all that, Prabal (sounds like trouble with a "P") is simply adorable. Here are five reasons why we can't get enough of him.


1. He's a young designer making grown-up clothes.
2. He's succeeding in this economy, something we all love to see.
3. His chic, timeless clothes won't go out of fashion.
4. His presentation almost caused a stampede with editors.
5. He embodies the new wave of American designers: young, cool, and with a perfect eye for cut and tailoring.


Black-and-ivory striped silk duchess asymmetric draped dress, $2,700; red faille striped silk duchess one-shoulder dress with bow detail, $2,750; both available at Bloomingdale's, 1000 Third Ave., at 59th St. 212-705-2000. Black-and-ivory silk faille and organza dress with hand-embroidered ostrich feathers, $4,800. Available upon request, sales@prabalgurung.com. For the spring collection (not yet in stores), check out Prabal's presentation.





 
Posted on 02-07-10 8:52 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 02-08-10 7:51 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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not only he is a great designer he is one nepali at heart that most of us arent half of what he is.  He knows typical nepali thegos, hindi movie buff......he is just a nice human being altogether.  He deserves all the success in the world.  Guess what his clothing lines called?  Yeap PG


 


http://www.prabalgurung.com/home.php


 


 


 

Last edited: 08-Feb-10 12:04 PM

 
Posted on 02-08-10 8:37 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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did you all know that he is the first neplese gay with high profile? well you know it now.

 
Posted on 02-08-10 10:42 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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i knew one of you will throw that in there but does it matter?  To be or not to be is not a choice.  Its biology. 


 


@dhhirajojha  -- You could not have been any lower.  Instead of praising a nepalese accomplishment you are being plain loser....oh well you are what you think.


 

 
Posted on 02-08-10 11:48 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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ahh he is soo cute and talented!!!


love his passion for his work and be a role model for all those who has creative inclination!!!


gay lesbo black white nepali indian....who the hell cares....question is do you have a clothing line of yourself...if not STFU!!!!!


 
Posted on 02-08-10 12:27 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Hate the attitude of people like ojha who'd looking for every opportunity to pull the legs.
 
Posted on 02-08-10 1:07 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepali people are homophobic, period, that includes me too. Look at the straight (NOT GAY) Nepali running our country; leaders, officials, Maoist, everybody sucking blood, killing, corruption and poverty, living in a lawless/moraless society. We do not have too many options. It is either Nepali like that from back home or this dude. Atleast this guy says he' from Nepal and doing you a favor to make your shitty country get some attention, something positively.You do the math.
Personally, as much as I disagree with homosexuality, but NOT this time, I'm in full support of Prabal and wish him a very successful future.

 
Posted on 02-08-10 3:40 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 02-08-10 3:53 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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FYI.

Sunil Babu Pant who is an openly GAY MP in Nepal is more popular than Prabal Gurung I think - well in Nepal certainly.

 
Posted on 02-08-10 7:49 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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i am star struck...his line is now demi moores favs looks like.....BRAVO...id be fortunate to get to know him

 
Posted on 02-08-10 10:12 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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hopefully i get to collaborate with this guy in coming years. i have few ideas that i need to get out.

 
Posted on 02-09-10 8:29 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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 zoe saldana, oprah, naomi, leighton meester etc..Hes on every fashion mag there is...dudes inspired new breed of Nep designers
 
Posted on 02-15-10 8:02 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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FASHION REVIEW

Three Nominees for Who’s ‘Next’

From left: Erin Baiano for The New York Times; Yana Paskova for The New York Times; Jennifer Altman for The New York Times

From left: Alexander Wang’s wool pinstripe swallowtail minidress with lace detail; Prabal Gurung’s black mesh dress with black and white silk chiffon and silk gazar ruffles; Altuzarra’s wool dress with laced vents and buckle detail and ruched silk georgette dress and a fitted jacket with goat hair.

Joseph Altuzarra is a Swarthmore-educated Paris-bred son of an American mother and a French father. Prabal Gurung grew up in Katmandu and trained at Bill Blass. At 25, Alexander Wang is the hitmaker of contemporary urban fashion, his $25-million business already surpassing that of many established designers.

If fashion didn’t routinely select a new group of designers to acclaim, it wouldn’t be fashion. There must always be someone waiting in the wings, the “next” one. These three designers now appear to be the leading candidates.

It is clear that Mr. Wang has managed to give his collections the properties of high fashion — top models; coveted accessories; a cool, insolent sensibility — while making affordable clothes that many women, not just skinny hipsters, can wear. His show again achieved the illusion of being something more than a contemporary-priced collection. With their matted hair and vacant gazes, the models, led by Natalia Vodianova, looked possessed by zombies, but you can bet that people will wonder when they can get their hands on the elephant-belled thigh-high tights that Mr. Wang showed with his miniskirts and platform boots. Like an old-fashioned merchant, Mr. Wang knows how to get value out of a single item.

The collection drew heavily on deconstructed tailoring: pinstripe blazers and vests lopped off at the midriff, blended with a furry layer or a broken lace top and a pair of boy trousers with part of the waistband snipped away. If it sounds a little tricky, with many extra parts, it was. Traditional garments of power and formality were the sources for swallowtail minidresses and camel wool clergy capes, and the general gloominess. Still, the collection was an ambitious step up for Mr. Wang, and despite the moving parts, it looked polished.

Mr. Gurung has a knack for the languid, jazzy tailoring of a Blass or a Saint Laurent, his spiritual mentors, and that feeling was captured in a fresh way in his first show last February. He also demonstrated in the next season that he could do chic dresses in double-silk satin with pleats and peplums.

So he didn’t need to repeat himself this time. While most of the day clothes were fairly solid — two-tone coats and suits in cashmere with curvilinear lines, boxy metallic tweed blazers — the ruffled evening looks didn’t seem new and indeed looked a bit tortured. A lanky jacket, shown with pants, that combined fox, mink and broadtail captured the lighter, offhand attitude that Mr. Gurung first conveyed, and to which he should return.

What gives Mr. Altuzarra an edge over virtually all the new young designers in New York is that he has a masterfully light hand with couture materials. His admiration for Tom Ford’s ability to give familiar shapes an extra kick of design and urgency was evident in this collection, his fourth. And the sexy fierceness of the mostly black clothes was incredibly appealing.

A number of designers this season are showing jackets that combine two or three different materials — fur and wool, say. In their straightforward collection, rich in texture, Alexa Adams and Flora Gill of the label Ohne Titel mixed suede with what appeared to be knitted fur, or black leather and a softer ribbed fabric.

But the motive in this collection and others seems to be to lend novelty to an otherwise basic garment. Nothing new or interesting is being proposed. And in some cases the contrasting textures come together in a lumpy way.

The difference with Mr. Altuzarra’s clothes — belted, close-to-the-body suits in black boiled wool with shoulders or fronts of glossy black goat hair — is that the choices feel more considered. He’s not just making a collage. Also, the workmanship on rather tough-looking materials, like leather and the glazed wool of a dress with laced vents, is consistently delicate.

Mr. Altuzarra used Frankenstein stitching on many of the pieces, in part to suggest the feeling of things coming apart, but the stitches are fine and random in length. As much as the big showy gestures, like the goat hair or the raised storm collars or the wool coats shaped by rows of buckled straps, the sutures play their part in an excellent collection.

The news at Preen, which is designed by Justin Thornton and Thea Bregazzi, was a bold, dark floral print used for blouses and dresses with articulated bra cups. There were a lot of familiar plays on transparency (dresses cut with random holes, sheer yokes). What looked fresh was a straight-line charcoal pantsuit over that blue-gray print.


 
Posted on 02-16-10 8:39 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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