2011年5月2日星期一

Malaysian Designer 'Zang Toi'



Born: Malaysia, 11 June 1961.  
Education: Studied fashion design at Parsons School of Design, New York, 1981-83.  
Career: Production associate, Mary Jane Marcasiano, New York, 1982-87; freelance designer, Ronaldus Shamask, New York, 1988; opened own business, 1989, introduced diffusion line Z, 1992.  
Exhibitions: Fashion Institute of Technology Museum.  Awards: Mouton-Cadet Young Designer award for Outstanding Achievement in the Arts, 1990.  
Address: 30 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019, USA. 
Zang Toi has the dubious distinction of being a featured designer in a Newsday article of October 1990, “Fashion’s New Kids: On the Block,” and of being a principal in Nina Darnton’s article “The New York Brat Pack,” in the April 1991 issue of Newsweek. In the Newsweek article, Zang Toi had the last word, telling Darnton, “I think women are looking for good prices and styles that are new—not just young people in the same mold as the current stars.” Likewise, in the Newsday article, Toi’s pragmatic and sensible remarks form the article’s conclusion when he says, “There are so many young designers who are eager to be stars right away. But ego can be the worst killer to any young designer. You can’t let the press and the hype go to your head. If the work doesn’t meet the demand and the quality, it doesn’t mean anything.”
Toi’s work resoundingly meets demand and determined desires and styles in the early 1990s. The gifted young designer has demonstrated a color sensibility related not only to Asian textiles (the collection that earned him the Mouton-Cadet Young Designer award was inspired by Southeast Asian textiles, with rich batiks and embroideries) but perhaps equally to Matisse in his vibrant palette. Toi’s color is often and aptly compared to Christian Lacroix’s, but Toi has brought his tinted exuberance to serviceable sportswear separates while Lacroix tends toward almost baroque forms of highly elaborated couture. For Lacroix, the pleasure is in the whole and design by ensemble; in Toi’s work, the delights are in the elements. Even within, his ingenious and extravagant details give punctuation with whimsy. Well-cut jackets, saucy skirts and shorts, spunky sarong skirts with ornament, wonderful vests and trousers provide a sensible dressing from constituents rich in color and texture. As much as Toi loves glamor, he also created a diffusion line, Z, launched in 1992, that luxuriates in denim and less expensive fabrication.
Toi did not set out to be a designer. Growing up as the youngest son of seven children of a grocer in a small town in Malaysia, he loved sketching and drawing but dreamed of being an architect or interior designer. His love of fashion came later and always in conjunction with cuisine and other pleasurable arts. He admits to wanting to combine fashion and running a restaurant. Like many designers, however, a lifetime interest in classic movie glamor and stars such as Audrey Hepburn encouraged his fashion interests. The Malay tradewinds have always brought rich interactions of British colonialism (apparent in Toi’s schoolboy stripes), Chinese, Indonesian, and other converging possibilities. Exoticism and pragmatic synthesis seem to come effortlessly to Toi.
In the West, we have traditionally enjoyed an adulation of the new, and Zang Toi is a new designer. But his merit and interest reside in the fact that his design is distinguished not by novelty but by his intense commitment to color. His fashion draws eclectically and with an absorbing anachronism on history and global fashion, always keeping his international eye for color. His practicality and sensitivity to the consumer are hallmarks of smart design for the 1990s and the 21st century beyond. Infinitely personable and charming, Toi, like many Western designers, is a social mixer and has a gregarious personality. Lauren Ezersky wrote, “I love Zang. Everybody loves Zang. He truly is one of the nicest designers on the scene today. And his designs are as fabulous as his gams, which he displays on a regular basis by wearing shorts.
In a fiercely competitive and fickle industry, Toi has flourished as a high society and movie star fashion designer. His commitment to luxury, beauty, and glamor continued to be evident in his designs, which made him the obvious choice to create a millennium gown for Melinda Gates (Mrs. Bill Gates). Whether the theme is the wild, wild West, inspired by a Montana trip (spring 2001), or “An Asian in Scotland” (fall 2001), his collections are executed in the finest fabrics and characterized by his signature use of color and attention to detail. His fall showing was one of the few to receive a standing ovation and praise from the New York fashion critics.
A favorite of Madonna, Sharon Stone, Ivana Trump, and Kirstie Alley, Toi is reaching out to their significant others by introducing a limited men’s line for fall 2001. “This is really for the husbands and boyfriends of my private customers. They are the ones who pay for the clothes.” Like his women’s clothes, the new line is handmade or hand-knit and uses luxury fibers like cashmere and silk.Zang Toi has held fast to his vision of fashion, despite an era of increasing informality and casual dress. “It is not a separate thing outside you, but something that flows out from inside you. That is why my clothes, my home, and my showroom all reflect a core that comes from the same source—a beauty that I see and feel and which takes its form in the look and feel of my creations and in the space where I live and work.” No longer the new kid on the block, Zang Toi continues to inspire and delight and remind us of what fashion and glamor are really all about. 
Zang Toi:
At the house of Toi, it all starts with color. Lavish hues of chartreuse, red, and hot pink…which, theoretically, should never be seen together. Here they have been combined masterfully with a flair and wit that has won the hearts of both critics and customers alike. Breaking the rules is what I do best. I try not to limit my thinking to the way things have been done before—my customers have come to expect the unexpected. Pioneering in dressing up good old all-American denim—in splashy red and hot pink stitching—and [adding] metalic gold stitching to sexy suits and little bustier dresses is the chicest way to dress.The Zang Toi formula is creating glamorous, tailored, classic sportswear with a dramatic twist; with a surprising mixed palette and signature design finishes. Evening at Zang Toi means haute fantasy with a dash of old Hollywood glamor.It is always a dream of mine to merge my fashion sense with fine food…. Food is like fashion; clothes are just a piece of cloth until you add the decoration and the look, then it becomes fashion. The same with food—once you start decorating it becomes appetizing. My personal philosophy is that beautiful food and clothes should always be a part of life.
Information from:http://zangtoi.wordpress.com/
Found by Sheryl Lam Yee Mun

Malaysian Designer, Dato' Jimmy Choo



He is a Malaysian fashion designer based in LondonUnited Kingdom. He is best known for founding Jimmy Choo Ltd that became known for its hand-made women's shoes.

Choo was born in PenangMalaysia into a family of shoemakers. He is of Chinese Hakka [2] descent. He made his first shoe when he was 11 years old. He is perhaps the most notable of students ofCordwainers Technical College in Hackney from which he graduated in 1983. (The college is now part of the London College of Fashion.) Choo has divulged that he worked part-time at restaurants and as a cleaner at a shoe factory to help fund his college education.



Jimmy Choo's beginnings can be traced back to his workshop in Hackney, North London, which he opened in 1986 by renting an old hospital building. His craftsmanship and designs were soon noticed and he came to the verge of international notability when his creations were featured in a record eight pages in a 1988 issue ofVogue magazine. Patronage from Diana, Princess of Wales from 1990 onwards further boosted his image.



In 1996, he co-founded Jimmy Choo Ltd with British Vogueaccessories editor Tamara Mellon.

In April 2001, Choo sold his 50% stake in the company for £10 million. He has since been concentrating his work on the exclusive Jimmy Choo Couture line produced under license from Jimmy Choo Ltd. The Jimmy Choo London line, also known as Jimmy Choo Ready-To-Wear or, simply, Jimmy Choo, is under the purview of Tamara Mellon. The ready-to-wear line has expanded to include accessories such as handbags.



Choo lives in London. He is currently involved in a project to set up a shoemaking institute in Malaysia, where his iconic status is often evoked to inspire budding shoemakers and fashion designers. His company Jimmy Choo Ltd. produces some of the most expensive high-end shoes.

Well, I think that is all for the introduction, lets see the work of his. Okay?










These shoes are amazingly made by Dato' Jimmy Choo.. He is our Malaysian despite living in London, but Once Malaysian, Always Malaysian

Found by Sheryl Lam Yee Mun

2011年5月1日星期日

Faces to watch

Faces to watch
10 young designers showcase their latest creations to an international audience
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Daniel Chong
Designer Nurita Harith
Rizman Ruzaini
Young, talented and ambitious! These best describe the 10 designers who showcased their collections at the Malaysia International Fashion Week 2008 (M-IFW’08) recently.
Each of them told a separate story of a fashion designer’s dream.
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Alexandrea Yeo and her model.
Featured at the start of the last day of the fashion week were Winson Tan, Nurita Harith, Rizman Ruzaini, Alexandrea Yeo, Justin Yap, Jimmy Lim, Eleanor Ng, Amir Luqman, Hatta Dolmat and Alwyn C.
That morning, the audience - comprising mostly friends and families - were in awe as the models took to the runway wearing each designer’s creations. As a special treat, Daniel Chong - one of Malaysia’s young talents - made a special appearance.
In different countries with different cultures and ethnicities, fashion can be interpreted through so many ways. It could never be described with only colours and patterns as inspirations are drawn from almost everything in a fashion designer’s lifetime experiences.
The same goes for these 10 up-and-coming fashion designers who showcased a wide array of bizarre and fashionable collections in line with the theme "10 Rising Stars". It was a memorable show that will surely spur them to greater heights in the international platfonm one day.
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Daniel Chong and his model
Just before the designers went backstage to celebrate a job well done, I managed to speak to three designers about how they felt about their fashion creations.
Nurita Harith
I started off taking part in competitions, including the Project Runway Malaysia. Since I was very young, I loved drawing female figures due to my fascination with models. I realised later that fashion was a big part of me. Most of my designs are seen in neutral tones, complemented by softness and femininity. My collection, ‘Shades of Grey’ was inspired by my new boutique in Bangsar which I have just given a new coat of paint. Using mostly satin, silk and stretchable fabrics, my dresses are seen in pastel colours. You would notice that it’s a statement of sophistication in a subtle way.
Alexandrea Yeo
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Winson Tan and his model.
Androgyny, sexuality, trans-gender and cross-dressing are some of the elements which you would notice in some of my designs. Based on high street ready-to-wear garments, the uniqueness of my collection is communicating masculine women, feminine men, shoulders and sleeves and the colour black. My collection this time around is inspired by an anime character, Mononoke. It tells of a story about escaping reality. Some of the illustrations that are noticeable are ‘how a Japanese brothel is like’, ‘a woman and man’ and ‘sexuality’. I’ve used a lot of embroidery and vibrant colours on black fabric as a canvas (background colour).
Winson Tan
My label started after I won the Most Promising Designer Award last year in the M-IFW’07. You would notice that my designs are more focused. My design process is a mould of intuition, imagination, experimentation and creativity. One obvious thing is that I’m greatly inspired by abstract issues of thoughts, feelings and emotions. The collection which you noticed on the runway this year is inspired by distortion. Distorted silhouettes are reflected through parts of the gowns which are made by Lego pieces. One of the gowns took me two days to complete! Besides the Lego-piece gowns, other colours which I used were black, ash, brown, grey and I even used Lego pieces to build the model’s shoes. However, there’s not much evening wear. My collection is more towards casual wear made of cotton and linen fabrics. Instead of a single element, I combined the avant garde and casual elements into one major element.
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Alwyn C
Daniel Chong
Alexandrea Yeo

Found by Rachel Wong Sook Leng
From: http://www.thesundaily.com/article.cfm?id=28369