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(lily) #1
Ethnic Minimalism

international market. Major outlets include Saks Fifth Avenue branches
throughout America, Petra Teufel in Germany, and in London, Shirin Guild
has been Liberty’s top-selling fashion label since 1997. Nonetheless, few know
her name.
Shirin Guild believes that certain styles of dress possess a time-honoured
functionality and enduring beauty and thus her collections subtly evolve from
season to season, whilst the basic square shaped silhouette and layered
approach remains the same. Function and comfort are a priority. Styles are
loose (many tops are made in just one size and skirts and trousers in small,
medium and large), hang from the shoulders and engulf – but never shroud



  • the wearer. Unusual within the high-fashion industry, is the designer’s pride
    in the fact that her clothes appeal to and flatter women of various ages,
    shapes and sizes. When worn in European or American urban contexts clothes
    bearing the Shirin Guild label can transcend distinctions between day and
    evening, formal and leisurewear. However a judicious variation in textiles
    and yarns can render garments of the same or similar cut ideal for specific
    purposes and occasions.
    The most luxurious fabrics and yarns, often those associated with the
    masculine wardrobe – pinstripe wool, soft flannel, crisp cotton shirting,
    Scottish cashmere, grainy tweed and Irish linen – predominate in Shirin Guild’s
    collections. However, she also actively embraces new developments in textiles:
    recent collections have featured a modernistic, gleaming yarn of steel encased
    within silk. Unusual materials accent the collections and include paper fabric
    and yarn and, since the decriminalization of hemp for textile purposes, the
    designer has made much use of this environmentally friendly and versatile
    fibre. The palette is predominantly dark and neutral, with injections of indigo,
    vibrant orange, yellow and muted spice tones. Where decoration appears it
    is geometric – printed and woven striped and checked designs and blocks of
    textured knit.
    The ethnographic styling and practicality of Shirin Guild’s designs can be
    assessed within the historical context of ‘unconventional’ (sometimes
    described as ‘eccentric’) dress – that is, styles selected by those who actively
    spurn high-fashion trends. In the post-war period fashions became increasingly
    diverse and open to individual interpretation, as well as a host of sub-cultural
    alternatives. Certainly before the 1950s, the evolution of fashionable style
    was strictly linear and to deviate from this was to risk ridicule and even
    social ostracism. Prior to the Second World War, it was therefore primarily
    the most daring members of the aristocracy, artists and intellectuals who
    dared to flaunt their rebellious attitudes via their mode of dress. Unconven-
    tional dress has an international context but has always found especially
    vocal expression in Britain.

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