Fatima Bhutto’s wedding: How much was Zulfiqar Bhutto Jr.’s kirta?

Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Jr’s clothes are quite interesting, I like them.

Fatima Bhutto Of Wedding When I saw the pictures of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Jr. in different places, I was a little curious that how much would this kirta of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Jr., which looks simple, be worth?

After searching here and there on the internet, the designer was found.

By the way, Bhutto Jr. is also a textile artist himself, but he has worn the fabric of ‘Angan Bazar’.

Angan Bazar was a new name for me. Look at all the details that he himself wrote on Instagram, but he still did not understand why Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Jr. wore his kirta.

Then I started following a word, which was written on the Facebook page of ‘Angan’.

That word was: ‘Slow Fashion’.

Slow fashion is a movement that carries the banner of better environment and social justice in the current fashion industry.

Environment? I thought this is already the hot cake of the West, what other point can be useful in ‘slow fashion’. That is, if there is something that is written on, then it is not realized that the person has been sold. Environmental noise is everywhere and so is funding, so the same goes for clothing? This question was just in mind.

The answer was that ‘the thing should be made as much as it is needed, in which there is zero possibility of waste of materials or resources in making it and that thing should be sold on the same account.’

I got this answer from Abdul Rehman who runs Angan. He also had to say that if someone copies my design, I will be happy because this thing is also promoting our message that all the things that our elders used to wear, our women. She used to make it again Fashion I have been coming and so has been in the homes, at leisure, at leisure. People will make them, copy them, wear them, others will see them and if they like them, they will be inclined towards it themselves.’

One thing I had in my mind was that in this business even the artisans sitting in remote villages would get little money and the brand would earn thousands. It also allows that the design made by ‘Angan’ can be made by the artisans themselves and sold to anyone or if they have a shop, they can also keep it.

‘From which I make khusa, I made two pairs of them, then next time I saw that six of them were in their shop. He said that local people are not only liking but also buying.

Regarding the environment, Abdul Rahman gave the example of jeans. “It takes hundreds of liters of water to make a pair of jeans, a carbon emission, whereas the clothes we have are made in the indigenous way on the khadi, by women embroidering while they are cooking, or lying at home at any time they have free time. And when was there a possibility of wasting resources in our indigenous ways? Then there is the personal touch of being handmade in these clothes, which the westerners now run after to say that things are handmade.’

The kurta worn by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto at Fatima Bhutto’s wedding is available at ‘Angan’ for Rs 7,000. The word ‘Angan’ is written under the collar with hand embroidery and twenty five tiny roses are embroidered on this white cotton shirt.

Abdul Rahman said that ‘we have named it ‘Gulab’. Fatima Bhutto herself wore a pair of ‘Pink Tree’ and Zulfiqar preferred ‘Gulab’. It was the biggest event of his life, the first happiness of his home and he emphasized the importance of wearing clothes that are eco-friendly. He gave a clear message of social awareness on this occasion, even in his happiness. He made us believe that not only humans but also animals and the environment are equally important.

“There are many people in Pakistan who support slow fashion, but the way Zulfiqar wore one of the ‘Angan’ kurtas, I think they were made for each other, as Zulfiqar has adapted his character more and more from the local culture.” They seem to connect and in all this they try to raise some questions. The consciousness they have acquired from Western philosophy is bringing it to the Milla with the local and indigenous culture.’

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Most ‘Angan’ designs have lots of flowers and most of their clothes are made for both men and women i.e. unisex. Abdul Rahman says that in this regard, he also gets a lot of hateful comments on social media. He said: ‘But I think it’s also a good thing, at least it starts a debate, people are thinking about it. We stopped wearing colored or embroidered clothes in imitation of the West, didn’t the Mughals wear them? Didn’t our big embroiderers wear clothes or kush?’

Have you seen the movie ‘Gangu Bai’ which was made by a South Indian director around 2012?’ Now this was Abdul Rahman’s question. He replied that ‘I did not see.’

Then he narrated the incident that Gangobai is taken to a garden, the owner of the garden asks if he likes it? So she replies, ‘Sir, what kind of garden is there, there is a pond, there are no fish and there are trees but no panchhi, so what kind of garden is this?’ These plants know where the sun is, which way they have to grow, our job is only to give water, some less, some more and they don’t even like pruning.

What he meant by this anecdote was that ‘we who employ local artisans, we don’t change too many classical designs, we don’t invite them from our homes, they make them at their own convenience, then we much Don’t coax work, don’t bother them, just help them market all that work and sell it at a good price.’


#Fatima #Bhuttos #wedding #Zulfiqar #Bhutto #Jr.s #kirta
2024-08-06 05:05:58

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