All for workplace outfits

All for workplace outfits
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All for workplace outfits
Highlights

The sight of women in resort-wear in business conferences, home-wear in meetings and shirts with drooping shoulders have led designer Varija Bajaj to venture into a label focusing on Indian culture, body shapes and skin tone which is targeted at working women professionals.

The sight of women in resort-wear in business conferences, home-wear in meetings and shirts with drooping shoulders have led designer Varija Bajaj to venture into a label focusing on Indian culture, body shapes and skin tone which is targeted at working women professionals.

"It's not who they (the women) are. It's the choice they are imposed with in the name of comfort, availability and lack of awareness," Bajaj said as she rued the lack of a work wear segment for women which "just doesn't exist in the Indian context".

With research, she deduced that the supply chain -- from the yarn to the ideal textiles to the end customer -- is completely oblivious of what should be ideal work wear for Indian women.

"The Indian body structure is very different from our western counterparts. With extensive research on Indian body types, we have realized that an average Indian body of a woman is 5 ft 2 inch with narrow shoulders and is pear shaped vis-a-vis 5 ft 6 inch, broader shoulders and rectangle or an apple shaped Western women," Bajaj explained.

With her brand Office&You, launched on International Women's Day, the designer has applied figure correction techniques through which they camouflage most defects and give an illusion of a relatively perfect figure.

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