Advertisement

Luxury fashion’s worst-kept secret and the Indian designers reclaiming what it means to make ‘haute couture’

  • Many haute couture houses – luxury fashion’s pinnacle – source textiles from Indian artisans, yet avoid a ‘Made in India’ tag by assembling pieces in Europe
  • It took 47 years for an Indian designer to show at Paris Haute Couture Week, in 2020 – now more are taking Indian craftsmanship to a global audience

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A look from Indian designer Gaurav Gupta’s spring/summer 2023 couture collection, at Paris Haute Couture Week 2023. Photo: Gaurav Gupta

Only a select few fashion brands are granted the status of haute couture houses.

Advertisement

As of now, there are 16. But does this pool truly capture the breadth of luxury handmade fashion?

More than 7,000km from Paris – the city from which the “haute couture” title is dished out – a growing number of designers would disagree.

Haute couture, which translates as “high dressmaking”, is first and foremost high-end fashion that is completely handmade, according to France’s Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode (Federation of Haute Couture and Fashion), which sets the requirements.

Looks from Gaurav Gupta’s spring/summer 2023 couture collection. Photo: Gaurav Gupta
Looks from Gaurav Gupta’s spring/summer 2023 couture collection. Photo: Gaurav Gupta

Among other qualifications, houses must create bespoke pieces for private clients in an atelier employing at least 15 full-time staff.

Advertisement
Advertisement