It’s all very girl-next-door meets Yash Chopra heroine and while not everybody can look as good as Mahira in a clinging short kameez, Bin Roye has us itching to channel the shalwar right into our wardrobes. Back and front necklines run deep and wide. Mahira Khan’s garrulous Saba has the flair – and the waistline – to wear the shalwar just right with fitted short shirts, short sleeves and flowy dupattas. Channeling the shalwar: Bin Roye brings old trends back Here’s what we loved … and some things that we didn’t:ġ. “They help create an overall aura and with local productions being viewed all around the globe, they represent our aesthetics to the world.”īin Roye’s an interesting watch not just for the emotional drama aficionado but also for the discerning savant. “On-screen wardrobes are important,” says Mahira Khan. Let's admit it: we all ran to our tailors, asking them to replicate this very suit. One remembers an all-black chiffon suit designed by Feeha Jamshed and worn by Mahira Khan that became an overnight sensation. In recent times, the power of popularizing trends through on-screen wardrobes was once again realized with Momina Duraid’s hit drama Humsafar. TV, meanwhile, veered towards the lackluster, with wardrobes relegated to the background. Thereafter, cinema declined, the svelte heroine being replaced by a rotund, bling-infested siren. Teejays provided wardrobe for nearly 150 dramas, a handful of which are Tanhaiyaan, Dhoop Kinare, Uncle Urfi and Ankahi Back in the ‘70’s and ‘80’s, one remembers how Teejays brought baggy androgyny and color-blocking into vogue by dressing leading ladies in popular dramas like Ankahi and Tanhaiyaan. It is testament to how trends are changing in cinema and television. One can’t call the movie’s wardrobe cutting-edge – naturally, the clothes have been selected to suit the characters in the movie – but the womenswear is certainly on-trend, very pretty and well-tailored. Taking some of the country’s most popular designer brands on board, Momina Duraid and Shahzad Kashmiri have endeavored to make sartorial statements through the silver screen. There’s one thing that HUM Films’ Bin Roye certainly has to offer aside from a tale of crying, love, death and some more crying: fabulous fashion.
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