House of Debaarun’s Poila Boishakh shoot featuring Sauraseni Mitra!
2 min read
Another year rolls out and a new year rolls in. Bidding goodbye to 1427, Bengalis are ready to
welcome 1428, full of hope, love and light. And of course when its Poila Boisakh, can being fashionably turned out
be far behind? Keeping the beautiful color palette of red and white in mind that is synonymous with Bengal, House
of Debaarun has launched its new collection called Red Riding Hood which was also showcased at FDCI X Lakme
Fashion Week this year.
We all are too familiar with the story of Little Red Riding Hood. It is a European fairy tale about a young girl and a
Big Bad Wolf that can be traced back to the 10th century to several European folk tales, including one from Italy
called The False Grandmother. The two best known versions were written by Charles Perrault and the Brothers
Grimm. The story has been changed considerably in various retellings and subjected to numerous modern
adaptations and readings. Other names for the story are: "Little Red Cap" or simply "Red Riding Hood". The main
theme of the story is to listen to what your parents tell you and not to talk to strangers. Essentially, she is sent on a
specific journey, told not to leave the path, and yet because she does she finds herself in a dangerous situation.
With this collection, fashion designer Debaarun Mukherjee intertwined and interpreted the Red Riding Hood story
in his own way. “This story has always inspired my imagination and made me ask many questions: the mystery
behind the red hood, the scary woods, the grandmother, the huntsman and over everything else, the stalker
"wolf". In my version of this tale, Red Riding Hood visits her sister in the wood and the wolf stalks the beautiful Red
Riding Hood and attacks the two sisters. They lock it in the cottage and run to seek for help from the
huntsman, but they stop midway. An epiphany occurs and the sisters decide to tackle the big bad wolf themselves
and in a display of courage and strength they proceed to fight it and win over it.”
This adaptation of Red Riding Hood is Debaarun’s own representation of the power that women have in today's
society, how they can protect themselves even if they take their own course and decide to choose their own fate.
Silks, chiffon and weaved fabric will adorn the cast in this collection and the monochrome palette of red and white
denotes power, courage and purity.
The shoot featured models Tamori Chaudhuri, Tanisha De, Rupam Das, Nischay Singh and Rana Mukherjee with
actress Sauraseni Maitra. The styling has been done by Anupam Chatterjee, and jewellery by Avama. The man
behind the lense is Somnath Roy.