Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Lassi With Lavina
    • Home
    • About Lassi with Lavina
      • About Lavina Melwani
    • The Buzz
    • Features
      1. Art
      2. Books
      3. Cinema
      4. Daily Pep Pill
      5. Dance
      6. Faith
      7. Fashion
      8. From Me to You
      9. Lifestyle
      10. Music
      11. People
      Featured
      May 20, 20250

      Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

      Recent
      May 30, 2025

      New York Diary – Photo of the Day: East River

      May 20, 2025

      Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

      March 29, 2025

       Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

    • Foodisphere
      1. Food Articles
      2. Restaurants
      Featured
      May 5, 20259

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      Recent
      May 5, 2025

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      October 28, 2024

      Exploring the Veggie Food Trail to India

      May 11, 2024

      Holi Moly! It’s Cocktails from India by way of NYC’s Bungalow!

    • Events
    • Videos
      • Health & Wellness
      • Fashion & Style
      • Food & Drink
      • Travel & Leisure
    Lassi With Lavina
    You are at:Home»Features»Fashion»Fashion: An Italian-Indian Love Story

    Fashion: An Italian-Indian Love Story

    2
    By Lavina Melwani on March 20, 2017 Fashion
    Share

    5907 people reached on FB Lassi with Lavina

    Attetude Babz, Esther Hringngen and 100 others like it on Lassi with Lavina FB page

    Navy/cream barre stripe fleece double breasted shawl jacket, natural/indigo slub terry barre stripe crewneck, hand dyed natural indigo khadi dhoti by EIDOS x Stoffa.
    Navy/cream barre stripe fleece double breasted shawl jacket, natural/indigo slub terry barre stripe crewneck, hand dyed natural indigo khadi dhoti by EIDOS x Stoffa.
    Cream silk and linen double breasted evening suit, white tonal slub barre stripe band collar popover, natural madder and harkat dyed herringbone head wrap by EIDOS x Stoffa.
    Cream silk and linen double breasted evening suit, white tonal slub barre stripe band collar popover, natural madder and harkat dyed herringbone head wrap by EIDOS x Stoffa.

    Fashion Passion: An Indian-Italian Love Story

    All Photos by Glen Allsop

    The Eidos Spring 2017 Collection
    The Eidos Spring 2017 Collection

    [dropcap]I[/dropcap]magine a fashion event during the New York Spring 2017 Fashion Week with all Indian models and in clothing inspired by the Indian sub-continent. Well, this did happen at the EIDOS Collection by Italian designer Antonio Ciongoli who said, “I’m  really proud we did it – People try to celebrate different cultures during NY Fashion Week, but never something so full-scale.”

    Antonio Ciongoli is the creative director of Eidos, a rugged yet refined menswear line from Italy which is sold at major American stores like Bloomingdales, Saks, Nordstrom and Barneys as well as in countries internationally from Russia to Japan to Australia.  Part of the luxury brand Isaia, It is designed in New York but produced in Italy and its makers like to describe it as ‘clothing with soul, made with integrity.’

    Women’s Wear Daily wrote: “The younger-skewed division of Italian luxury brand Isaia took a more fashion-forward approach to its spring collection, using India as a starting point. But instead of using the country’s predictable bright colors and silky fabrics, creative director Antonio Ciongoli took a more-intellectual approach with his neutral palette and raw textured fabrics.”

     

    Antonio Ciongoli
    Antonio Ciongoli
    Inspiration: Jaipur
    Inspiration: Jaipur

     

    [dropcap]C[/dropcap]iongoli, who grew up in Naples, travels constantly between New York and Italy and as he admits, “As creative people, I think we get tired of seeing the same thing over and over again. I’m a firm believer in the idea that excellence exists everywhere and I try to do that with our brand – I hope that our customer is a global customer and an open-minded customer. And that one of the things we do well is implementing the idea of  how big the world can be and how there are amazing things all over the place that you should see.”

    Natural bonded linen waterproof ‘Bagru’ duster, iron linen work shirt, deep iron reverse terry pleated pajama sweatpants.
    Natural bonded linen waterproof ‘Bagru’ duster, iron linen work shirt, deep iron reverse terry pleated pajama sweatpants.
    Tan/earthen linen double stripe dobby band collar popover, deep earthen reverse loopback terry pleated patiala pajama sweatpants
    Tan/earthen linen double stripe dobby band collar popover, deep earthen reverse loopback terry pleated patiala pajama sweatpants

     

    [dropcap]S[/dropcap]heer serendipity took him to India where one of his best friends, who is Indian, was developing textiles in Rajasthan, using natural dyes like indigo, madder and iron.  Ciongoli found that East and west meet in a restaurant and watering hole called Bar Palladio in Jaipur which has been opened by an Italian expat Barbara Miolini in an ancient Indian palace.  Here artists, designers and writers gather to exchange notes and have a few drinks.

    But for Ciongoli, the real eye-opener came in Bagru,  a dusty village which is located 45 minutes from Jaipur. It is the heart of the textile creation where it is all done by hand. There are no machines involved. He describes the surreal landscape that he encountered: “It was a completely different world.  There were massive earthen fields as far as the eye could see, covered with rolls and rolls of blue denim fabric drying in the sun, with cows meandering across them – because they lived there! I had never seen anything like this.  It was a complete departure from my daily life.  At that moment I knew that when I presented my collection, I wanted to recreate this feeling of inspiration, with an all-Indian cast, and with many men and women.”

    Bagru – The Inspiration Behind the Collection   Photo: Glen Allsop

     

    Bagru Village, Jaipur
    Bagru Village, Jaipur

     

    [dropcap]B[/dropcap]ack in New York when he told his casting director of his plan, he was told he was crazy! No one knew any major Indian models so they decided to go with regular street people, including an old Sardarji cabbie. All the media seemed intrigued by that but as Ciongoli points out, ” People couldn’t see past the cab driver. The big thing wasn’t that he was a cab driver but the fact that he was cool.So I’d rather street-cast the whole thing. We are very happy the way it worked out.”

    Ciongoli’s casting director spent time in Jersey City and Jackson Heights and Brooklyn as well as on social media, hunting real people from students to the Red Baraat band to people on the street. “It was really nice to have regular people – I’m much more inspired by normal people because of their experience, their inner personalities – rather than by professional models.”

    Due to his madness or determination, Ciongoli managed to get at least 90 percent people of Indian descent for the runway and the unusual casting got the show a lot of editorial ink.

     

    Spring Collection 2017

    Natural indigo dyed seersucker shirt jacket and ghurka pants, tonal indigo slub cotton and silk vintage stripe shawl kurta.
    Natural indigo dyed seersucker shirt jacket and ghurka pants, tonal indigo slub cotton and silk vintage stripe shawl kurta.
    Deep earthen cotton and linen knit Nehru vest, white cotton slubduofold shawl kurta, white reverse loopback terry pleated patiala pajama sweatpant.
    Deep earthen cotton and linen knit Nehru vest, white cotton slubduofold shawl kurta, white reverse loopback terry pleated patialapajama sweatpant.
    White slub nylon weatherclothanorak, white seersucker ‘Madan’ pleated placket kurta popover, natural reverse knit jersey drawcord sweatpants.
    White slub nylon weatherclothanorak, white seersucker ‘Madan’ pleated placket kurta popover, natural reverse knit jersey drawcord sweatpants.

     

    [dropcap]H[/dropcap]ow does he see the contemporary man and how does he design for him? “Across most cultures, the commonality is comfort and that’s what I try to do – the majority of my time I try to spend in designing clothes that are easy to wear and are rooted in some kind of history,” he says.  “One of the things which excited me about India – something made with integrity and natural fabrics and dyes – there’s a common thread which weaves through all that.”

    What about Indian silhouettes – could the pajamas and more radically, the dhoti catch on? “We weren’t planning to sell the dhoti but I did learn to tie one!” he says. ” I think the pajamas have sold very well – we make it a little less full in the leg and do  a knit woven version of it.”

    “I loved the idea of the kurta – it is a fashion trend throughout the west right now. I expect these slouchy and easy kurta pajama will do very well. For the last ten years we’ve had very fitted clothes in the US – but now the silhouette is changing – fuller, longer tops like the kurta without a collar and looser pajama pants. I’d like to continue them well past this one particular season.”

     

    A resident of Bagru, the village which inspired the casual comfort feel of the collection.
    A resident of Bagru, the village which inspired the casual comfort feel of the collection.  Photo: Glen Allsop

    [dropcap]I[/dropcap]s there a place for Indian models in the New York fashion scene? “I certainly hope so!,” says Ciongoli. “ We did runway shows for years and it’s very hard to find ethnically diverse or even ethnically ambiguous models.  I’d really, really love to see more Indian, more Middle Eastern,  more diversity in models. I think it’s really important particularly in America –  for the American public to see that idea of beauty in all. What is cool is not any one particular thing – there are lots of definitions of cool.”

    As Ciongoli points out, the Internet has made everything more global and the world a more smaller place – that’s why it’s important not to present a provincial brand but a more global look which resonates with everyone. And increasingly his plans include India which he hopes to see a lot more of. Truly an India-Italy love affair!

    “ People were worried about cultural appropriation but for me, it’s a little bit different,”  recalls Antonio Ciongoli. ” It wasn’t about trying to take something and make it ours but rather celebrating something that we found amazing and share it with other people. Hopefully we did something of value,  particularly now in America in the current political climate when there’s a lot of close-mindedness about things that are different. I think it was incredibly important to present the idea that all cultures have great things and people need to be more open-minded.”

     

    .

     

     

     

    Lavina Melwani
    • Website

    Lavina Melwani is a New York-based journalist who writes for several international publications. Twitter@lavinamelwani & @lassiwithlavina Sign up for the free newsletter to get your dose of Lassi!

    Related Posts

    New York Diary: An Evening with Deepak Chopra, Chandrika Tandon and Fareed Zakaria

    Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

    Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

    2 Comments

    1. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2016 6:22 pm

      Thanks, Rekha. It’s always exciting to find stories that are off the beaten track!

    2. Rekha on November 12, 2016 10:29 pm

      Very interesting. Loved it.

    Leave A Reply

    top Indian blogs
    Find Us on FaceBook
    Recent Posts
    June 8, 2025

    What is Indian genius? Does it exist?

    May 30, 2025

    New York Diary – Photo of the Day: East River

    May 23, 2025

    New York Diary: An Evening with Deepak Chopra, Chandrika Tandon and Fareed Zakaria

    May 20, 2025

    Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

    May 5, 2025

    Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

    * indicates required
    Close
    Translate Lassi with Lavina
    Photo Blog
    Women Warriors
    Lassi with Lavina Tweets
    Follow lassiwithlavina on Twitter
    Connect on LinkedIn…
    View Lavina Melwani's LinkedIn profileView Lavina Melwani's profile

    About

    Lassi with Lavina is a dhaba-style offering of life and the arts through the prism of India. It shares the celebrations and concerns of the global Indian woman. Supported by the Knight Foundation for Journalism, it brings stories from New York to New Delhi to readers globally. About Lassi with Lavina

    Copyright © 2015 Lavina Melwani and Lassi with Lavina. Photos © Copyright 2015 Respective Photographers. Reproduction of material without written permission is prohibited

    Children’s Hope – every child counts. Click to learn more

    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.