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Don't worry, be happy: Brazil defies global gloom with fashion


The world may be becoming a glummer place with the global crisis, but in Brazil, Latin America's biggest fashion show is showing there's still room for a little happiness in the wardrobe.

The Sao Paulo Fashion Week, a showcase of the top level of Brazil's 50-billion-dollar fashion industry, struck the theme "Brazilianness" this year -- which in short meant capturing the innate joy of this tropical nation and sending it swaying down the runway.

Thirty-eight houses unveiled their 2009 winter collections.

Many hewed to the blacks and grays favored by European and US stylists so admired by Brazil's moneyed elite -- colors and which are likely to serve as a statement on the world economy for some time to come.

But, true to theme, they also revealed creations full of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
, capturing the optimistic op·ti·mist  
n.
1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome.

2. A believer in philosophical optimism.



op
 spirit of a country that has raised its global profile amid economic progress.

In a way, the balance between dark and light, hue and shadow, spoke to Brazil's ambitions to leverage its emerging market clout, resourcefulness Resourcefulness
Buck

clever and temerarious dog perseveres in the Klondike. [Am. Lit.: Call of the Wild]

Crichton, Admirable

butler proves to be infinite resource for castaway family on island. [Br. Lit.
 and imagination to take its fashion international.

Cori's outfits, designed by Rita Comparato and Dudu Bertholini, married the dichotomy di·chot·o·my  
n. pl. di·chot·o·mies
1. Division into two usually contradictory parts or opinions: "the dichotomy of the one and the many" Louis Auchincloss.
 by pairing, for example, a satin black power dress with a red belt that looked to be a bow on a present.

Another number matched a tailored high-waisted grey flannel flannel, large group of napped plain-weave or twill-weave fabrics made of cotton, wool, or man-made fibers. Flannel fabrics vary in closeness or firmness of weave and in degree of napping.  jacket and black turtleneck not out of place in a Paris office with a cheery cheer·y  
adj. cheer·i·er, cheer·i·est
Showing or suggesting good spirits; cheerful: a cheery hello.



cheer
 orange leather skirt


The novelty of research or terms used in this article is disputed.
 that could only come from a perma-smile southern clime.

Osklen, a house more apt to win the favors of mode-hungry Manhattanites, stuck to alternating black and beige beige  
n.
1. A light grayish brown or yellowish brown to grayish yellow.

2. A soft fabric of undyed, unbleached wool.

adj.
Light grayish-brown or yellowish-brown to grayish-yellow.
 in a relaxed yet muted collection.

Its male and female models were accessorized with thick-rimmed spectacles and stony ston·y also ston·ey  
adj. ston·i·er, ston·i·est
1. Covered with or full of stones: a stony beach.

2. Resembling stone, as in hardness.

3.
a.
 expressions in a nod to the bleak horizon set before the luxury trade here, and everywhere.

Most colorful was Fause Haten, playing up the romance of sheer trousered ensembles with red and orange dominating, while adding an eye-catching flourish of shiny metallic galaxies down legs and across waists.

The outfits may still have some way to convince foreign fashion buyers, some of whom said Brazilian styles and finishes had a little way to go before its clothes could find a worldwide following.

But Sao Paulo's sophisticated jet-set was sold.

"You have this reference of colours, of rivers, or nature, of green, of palm trees," said Melina Valente, a 34-year-old art show producer attending the runway shows.

It wasn't all a tribute to Brazil's bucolic extravagances, though.

"In Sao Paulo, you see fashion, it's like in Milan," she said.

Maria Prata, the fashion editor for Vogue Brazil, said the show's salute to "Brazilianness" was as much a celebration of the nation's resourcefulness as its exuberance.

That character -- of finding a way around every obstacle -- would be a credit to the country's fashion industry, and its economy generally, she said.

"If someone says you cannot do that, you don't stand there and say 'OK I can't do that,' you always try to do it, you keep trying, and you keep going and you keep walking," she said.

"And I think that's what we have the best: We're trying, and we'll keep trying."
Copyright 2009 AFP Global Edition
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

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Author:AFP
Publication:AFP Global Edition
Date:Jan 23, 2009
Words:524
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