Designer Profile: Pakistan's Queen of Couture

She’s the founder of one of the leading fashion houses in Pakistan, has shared runways with couture kings and dressed the likes of Princess Diana and pop sensation, Madonna. What’s more, Nilofer Shahid has accomplished this without ever having been formally trained.
When we ask the esteemed designer to let us in on the secret to her success, she replies, “I’m a fatalist. I’m not a planner. It was destiny that put me on this journey.” Fair enough. But for those of us who ingest fate with a grain of salt, it’s comforting to know there’s more to her story. “It’s not always about being formally trained, it’s about technique, experience, creativity and development.”
Shahid also reflects on what it takes to survive in the undenyably challangeing world of fashion, “I don’t believe in shortcuts, I believe in growing with your work.” Shahid didn’t just grow onto the fashion scene, she exploded.
Coming from a family of poets, writers and painters, it seems natural for Shahid to have an affinity for finer things.And she does. It began in 1978 when a young Shahid, with an already developing style for hand painting and block printing deriving from Islamic art, was inspired by couture and decided to start a fashion workshop. “There were hardly any designers around at the time in Pakistan and label awareness didn’t exist so it was in a sense that no one understood the value of designing authentic.” Shahid sees Pakistani fashion as being unique. “The exotic link we have always resonates in our clothes and this gives us an edge over other designers.”


In her Chughtai collection, Shahid pays homage to painter Abdur Rahman Chughtai, an artist known also known as the Matisse of Pakistan. One painting by Matisse in particular, depicts a lotus floating on water, but not in control. Just like nature, it surrenders to balance. Using the painting’s message, the Meera's team selected black and white colours to represent balance for this collection. Though it was created in 1997, the Chughtai collection is still receiving orders today.Whether it’s in her sartorial interpretation of the Rubaiyats of Omar Khayyam, her Central Asian line or grand Mughal recreations, Shahid’s spirituality comes to life with each new creation, paying tribute to both the past and present. “People tell me that my clothes have a soul and I think this is great because it comes from my heart.”

Putting Pakistan on the fashion map is an honour Shahid does not take lightly. But what’s to come for the country’s fashion ambassadress? Even she does not know. “I’m not a business woman, I’m an artist. I’m peaceful when I let fate lead me.”
BY: SONIA LOWE/PUBLISHED: FALL 2009 ISSUE
(PHOTOS COURTESY OF DESIGNER)












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