- Title: USA: SPRING COLLECTION FROM TANYA SARNE'S 'GHOST' LABEL.
- Date: 31st October 1996
- Summary: NEW YORK, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES (OCTOBER 31, 1996) (RTV ) 1. GV/ZOOM/MV: CHINA BLUE LUPIN GEORGETTE APPLIQUE DRESS/ AUDIENCE (2 SHOTS) 0.18 2. MV: YELLOW HALTER-NECK DRESS. 0.30 3. MV: BLACK METALLIC GEORGETTE ASYMMETRIC CAPE TOP DRESS. 0.44 4. MV: LAVENDER METALLIC GEORGETTE DRAPE SLEEVE ASYMMETRICAL DRESS. 0.59 5. MV: LAVENDER PRINT MID-LENGTH COAT MADE OF THE LIGHT, WOOD-DERIVED FABRIC SARNE CALLS "PAPER."/ LAVENDER "PAPER" SLASH-NECK TOP AND TEAK-CLOURED "PAPER" PIN TUCK SAILOR TROUSER. 1.29 6. MV: WHITE ORGANZA KIMONO DRESS WITH RED PAPER OBI/ LAVENDER ORGANZA PRINT COLUMN DRESS AND ORGANZA PRINT OBI 1.59 7. MV: TANYA SARNE TALKING TO JOURNALISTS AFTER THE SHOW. 2.06 8. MCU: TANYA SARNE TALKING ABOUT THE JAPANESE INFLUENCE ON HER DESIGNS , "TO ME, NOTHING IS MORE DELICATE AND FEMININE AND BEAUTIFUL THAN THE JAPANESE WAY --- THE WAY THEY MIGHT WRAP A PACKAGE OR CUT A VEGETABLE, TURN SOMETHING ORDINARY INTO SOMETHING EXTRAORDINARY." 2.39 Initials Script is copyright Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
- Embargoed: 15th November 1996 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES
- City:
- Country: USA
- Reuters ID: LVAD9MWI7T88BCCZLLQ42NIN875K
- Story Text: INTRO: Unusual and delicate fabrics, soft flowing lines, and a mix of Japanese and western traditions were the leading elements of Tanya Sarne's 1997 spring and summer clothes for women.
-------------------------------------------------------------------- The British designer, Tanya Sarne, was one of the many designers showing off collections during New York's Fashion Week on Thusday (October 31).
Sarne's clothes are sold under the label Ghost. Like many other designers in New York, Sarne is making extensive use of delicate, sometime sheer fabrics.
She said most of the dresses she will sell are less revealing than those modelled in her show. But she said there was an industry-wide trend toward sheer fabrics. With underwear therefore more visible, women might begin to spend more on their foundation garments.
Sarne incorporated traditional Japanese women's designs. She said she admired the Japanese practice of taking something ordinary -- like wrapping a package or cutting a vegetable --- "and making something beautiful out of it, a work of art." Sarne showed many clothes made of a new fabric she created, which she calls "paper." It is not actually paper, but it is derived from wood products.
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