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Kids' clothes designers in Bali
Take Bali’s fledgling textiles industry, stir in a smattering of
creative expatriates and skilled local artisans, sprinkle with
oodles of beaches-to-smouldering-volcano inspiration: You’ve got
yourself a one-stop island shop for beautiful children’s designer
clothes. And while it might be hard work traipsing the tropical streets
of Bali to unearth finds from the following labels, the sweetener
is you’ll often snare the very same piece for a fraction of the
price it will sell on international shelves once it’s exported. The emphasis is on graphics and colour at the Littlehorn
Clothing Company, which boasts two reliably imaginative and
offbeat collections for girls, boys and infants a year. The
boutique label focuses on lightweight cottons and is just the
spot to snap up an unusual blankie for a special bub or a tee for
a six-year-old with a touch of rocker attitude. Designer Sean
Cosgrove says Littlehorn has “got this handwriting that’s very
pop orientated, and it sits in a funny category all of its own.”
One of the attractions of Bali for the company, and many others
here, is that manufacturers don’t blink an eye when asked to do
small fabric runs, allowing the label to easily churn out an
array of their distinct prints. The Clara Mia shop is as tiny and carefully curated as its
fabrics are delicate and divine. Anne Jegou takes French vintage
clothes as her inspiration, updating sundresses she used to wear
as a child unearthed from her grandmother’s cupboard and pieces
that belonged to her grandfather. Her boys’ range uses as a
starting point pieces that belonged to her late grandfather.
“What I’m trying to do is to recreate that classic collection,
but with materials that are a little bit more modern,” says
French-born Anne, who was raised in North Africa and lived a
stint in Shanghai before relocating to Bali to set up her label.
Clara Mia’s all-natural fabrics are nearly all sourced from
outside Bali, with Anne favouring linens from China, silks from
Thailand and cottons from France. If you see a piece you like
here, consider buying all you can, as Anne does very few pieces
per design: “We’re almost like an atelier,” she says. At Kidsagogo, think crisp blues and greens for boys, and hot
pinks and oranges for girls, swirled with lots of cooling white,
geometric batik and bold hand-stitching. Sue Hadinata opened her
first store in 1989 after dresses she made herself for her own
two little girls got a lot of encouraging comments. “From the
moment I opened the shop I just haven’t stopped,” she says, with
some 100 tailors now employed to work on the label. Fabrics
purchased in Bali are dyed to her own specifications and are
augmented with trimmings she picks up on her travels. “I want a
very clean, fresh look for children. I like to keep children
looking like children,” she says. Their homewares and accessories
are a standout too. They don’t have their own shopfront yet but new entrant Coco
and Ginger is a label worth hunting down.
Ceramicist-turned-designer Saffron Pugh-Blaby takes inspiration
for her girls’ collection from Balinese textiles and the colour
that infuses life on the island, from the grandest of ceremonies
to the smallest of daily offerings. “My heart lies in colour. I
love colour and I find that inspiring, to go into a shop and to
be able to pick from a rainbow of beautiful silk batik,” she
says. An emphasis on the dreamy and floaty is balanced with
bolder hand-embroidered pieces, working well in the tropics as
well as with black tights and Mary Janes back in cooler climes.
Quilts perfect for little beds as well as cushions are expanding
the label. Dandelion opened to great acclaim among expatriates in
mid-2008. Its collections for boys and girls have a clean, smart
European look with plenty of mix and match so you may be unable
to resist walking out with a whole lot more than you initially
intended to buy. “We have to go fresh because we are in a summer
country, so it’s a really bright range, but with French styling,”
says Gabrielle Morabia, who has shifted from a focus in working
in the rag trade for grown ups to little people. “My design has
always been very fresh and contemporary, and more on the
feminine, girly side, so the look has just translated generally
into kidswear,” she says. Shoes have just been added with
swimwear to come. Tuck Shop/The Corner Store Jalan Laksmana 10A, Seminyak Clara Mia Jalan Laksmana 43, Seminyak Kidsagogo Jalan Laksmana 29, Seminyak Coco and Ginger Sold at The Corner Store (above), Be Shop
(Pertokoan Seminyak Centre Blok M 75, Jalan Raya Seminyak,
Legian), Ayana Resort, Aman resorts and Karma Kandara Dandelion Jalan Raya Basangkasa 28, Seminyak |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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