Regina-born designer showing ethical collection at Sask Fashion Week - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Regina-born designer showing ethical collection at Sask Fashion Week

A Toronto-based designer from Regina is returning to her home province this weekend to see her latest designs hit the Sask Fashion Week runway.

Eman Bare tackling fashion industry's ethical, gender issues head-on

Eman Bare's new spring-summer collection will debut at Sask Fashion Week Saturday night. (Antar Hanif)

A Toronto-based designer from Regina is returning to her home province this weekend to see her latest designs hit the Sask Fashion Week runway.

As part of the three-dayevent, Eman Bare will show her latest collection on Saturday night.

Bare said the collection channels her Somali-Ethiopian-Saskatchewan upbringing. (Antar Hanif)

The designer, writer and former journalist at CBC Saskatchewan is giving a little more depth to the world of fashion with her collection focused on ethics andempowerment ofwomen.

With a recent brand expansion, Bare said she wanted to work with women from marginalized communities from all around the world.

Her last collection of accessories was made in Malaysia and Morocco by a few select women she found through social media or friends of friends.

A goal of empowering women

"These were women who would use the money I sent them through Western Union to pay for their kids' school fees," she said.

One of the women, Asima, left her native country of Myanmar, also known as Burma, to find work at a women's collective in Malaysia.

This meant leaving three of her kids behind with her parents because she couldn't find work.

"To her it was either separate her family or not feed her children," Bare said.

Each turban in Bare's collection is made by Asima. The mother, with whom Bare said she's become very close, was only able to take her youngest daughter with her and has hopes of reuniting her family.

"For me it's become, how do I make this so that she can go back to Burma? How do I train her to do the work that she does, but work from home so she can be back with her kids?" said Bare, who added her company is about more than just business transactions.

"How can we, as women, support each other all over the world?"

The Luna turban in maroon was made by Asima in Malaysia. (emanidel.com)

Bare said her next collection will be made by creators in Bangladesh, a place she said she thought she never wanted to do business in because of its connection to sweatshops.

"They actually have a thriving fashion industry. It's just, they have different grades of factories," Bare explained. "Big manufacturing companies choose to work with C-grade-level factories that are known for their unethical practices."

She said she is working to remind consumers that they make the decisions on whether companies use big sweatshops by buying from them and therefore supporting that practice.

"By educating on why it's harmful, I'm hoping that I can help people make a decision towards something that's either locally made or ethically made in another country," she said.

Collection influences

Bare's collection will be featured in the Saturday night runway show at Sound Stage, which is set to get going at 7 p.m.

She said you can expect a line that brings together different aspects of her heritage and upbringing.

"My clothing line is like my childhood and my experiences growing up as a Somali-Ethiopian-Saskatchewan person," she said. "Being Canadian means being more than just one culture. For me, it's like eating samosas at hockey games which myfamily grew up doing."

Her latest collection includes clothing inspired by tradition andmade from traditional textiles, recreated in a contemporary way that Bare said is wearable ineveryday settings.

Bare promises ethically made products that provide employment opportunities for women around the world. (Antar Hanif)

Her final clothing piece will be a Somali-inspiredsee-through dress, something she said might not be expected from a Muslim designer.

"I make clothing for women to feel as powerful and as comfortable as possible, especially for women who work in fields that are dominated by men," she said. "I always say that I want fabric to be the last thing to leave a room when I walk out.

"I want to always make a statement."

Seeing all her hard work on stage will be a pretty emotional moment for Bare, she said, comparing it to reading her diary out loud.

"It's terrifying. I know exactly what I was thinking when I drafted every single pattern or when I started designing. Soit's being as vulnerable as you can be as an artist," she said.

After the show, Bare said she plans to reacquaint herself with her Regina roots by standing in line for a treat at a local favourite, Milky Way.

Tickets to Saturday night's runway shows are available online and at the doors.

With files from Peter Mills