Global models to attend Modest Fashion Week

Global models to attend Modest Fashion Week
Halima Aden will attend this year's Modest Fashion Week in April. (File/ Getty Images)
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Global models to attend Modest Fashion Week

Global models to attend Modest Fashion Week

DUBAI: Models and influencers including Halima Aden, Mariah Idrissi, and Rawdah Mohamed are set to attend the 10th edition of Modest Fashion Week from April 14-16.

This year’s edition will be held in Abu Dhabi, in the UAE, with previous iterations having been held in Istanbul, Dubai, London, Riyadh, Amsterdam, and Jakarta.

In 2025, organizers expect fashion labels from 10 countries to take part, with a schedule of masterclasses, workshops and panel discussions also on the agenda.

Think Fashion and Miral Destinations are partnering to host the event, with Liam Findlay, CEO of Miral Destinations, commenting: "Hosting the 10th edition of the Modest Fashion Week on Saadiyat Island Abu Dhabi, a globally recognized event in the fashion industry, is a significant milestone.”

The event will draw star power in the form of Aden, Mohamed and Idrissi, who have hit the catwalk for luxury brands during their careers.

Aden has walked the runway at New York Fashion Week multiple times and was also a member of the judging panel at the 72nd Miss Universe pageant in El Salvador in 2023.  She shot to fame for being the first woman to wear a hijab in the Miss Minnesota USA pageant in 2016, where she was a semi-finalist.  




Mariah Idrissi will attend this year's Modest Fashion Week in April. (File/ Getty Images)

Somali Norwegian model Mohamed, who has an eyewear campaign with Italian label Dolce & Gabbana under her belt, has worked with brands like Boss and H&M and is also a regular on the Cannes Film Festival red carpet in France.

Mohamed walked the Roberto Cavalli show in Dubai in 2024 and previously told Arab News that she “sort of stumbled into modeling” after a mutual friend put her in touch with her manager while she was at university studying for a degree in behavioral analysis and healthcare.

Mohamed said: “I went to a fashion show in Oslo at the end of 2018 where I met my manager. He told me about what they were doing and I went to his office for a meeting and I said I wasn’t sure if I wanted to be a model but I wanted to work in fashion.”

Born in north west London to Moroccan and Pakistani parents, model Idrissi made headlines when she became the first hijab-wearing model to front a major fashion campaign for H&M in 2015.


Elyanna fronts Coach’s Ramadan campaign

Elyanna fronts Coach’s Ramadan campaign
Updated 17 sec ago
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Elyanna fronts Coach’s Ramadan campaign

Elyanna fronts Coach’s Ramadan campaign

DUBAI: Palestinian Chilean singer Elyanna is the face of Coach’s Ramadan 2025 campaign.

In the campaign, Elyanna is seen against a desert-inspired backdrop, styled in pieces that blend contemporary fashion with cultural influences. 

She is seen carrying Coach’s signature handbags, each featuring gold chain accents and the brand’s signature “C” clasp.

In one image, she wears a dark oversized coat with black trousers and knee-high boots, accessorized with a muted sage green handbag.

Another image captures Elyanna in a black long-sleeve top and a voluminous pink skirt. Her hairstyle incorporates braids with metallic embellishments, and is holding a black Coach handbag with gold detailing.

Elyanna has been normalizing Arabic lyrics in the Western world throughout her career, taking inspiration from artists including Lana Del Ray and Beyonce, as well as Middle Eastern legend Fayrouz.

The Los Angeles-based singer’s music is a mix of Arabic and Western beats, which she attributes to her multicultural upbringing.

Last month, Elyanna performed live with British band Coldplay during their four-show run in Abu Dhabi, UAE.

The music sensation has previously hinted at upcoming projects this year, stating: “The sunrise and the rebirth of the ‘Woledto’ project is just (the) start for the next chapter of 2025. Arabic is the music of the soul and the sun. Grateful for all the talented people that believed in this project and helped with the vision to come to life this tour (sic).”

Elyanna’s debut album “Woledto” featured nine songs: “Woledto,” “Ganeni,” “Calling U,” “Al Sham,” “Mama Eh,” “Kon Nafsak,” “Lel Ya Lel,” “Yabn El Eh” and “Sad in Pali.”

Before releasing the album, she wrote to her Instagram followers: “This album is the embodiment of pride to be an Arab woman, to be from Nazareth, to be from the Middle East.” 


Football star Mohamed Salah’s daughter stars in Ramadan TV series

Football star Mohamed Salah’s daughter stars in Ramadan TV series
Updated 25 February 2025
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Football star Mohamed Salah’s daughter stars in Ramadan TV series

Football star Mohamed Salah’s daughter stars in Ramadan TV series

DUBAI: Liverpool FC star Mohamed Salah’s daughter Makka is set to make her on- screen debut in Egyptian Ramadan TV series “Kamel El Adad 3.”

Born in 2014 in London, Makka’s role in the series was announced by director Khaled El-Halafawy, though details about her guest appearance remain under wraps.

The show is returning for its third season this Ramadan and sees stars Dina El-Sherbiny and Sherif Salama as Layla, a woman working in the cosmetics industry, and her husband Ahmed Mokhtar, a cosmetic surgeon. They live with eight children and the series follows the trials and tribulations faced by the household.

The Egyptian footballer surprised the cast of the show with a video call during filming, according to ET Bil Arabi.

Othe cast members include actors Hussein Fahmy, Engy al-Mokadem, Mariam al-Khost, Youssef Omar, and Amr Saleh.

Salah and his wife Magi share two daughers, Makka and Kayan, who was born in 2020.


Nora Attal stuns at Burberry’s Winter 2025 show

Nora Attal stuns at Burberry’s Winter 2025 show
Updated 25 February 2025
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Nora Attal stuns at Burberry’s Winter 2025 show

Nora Attal stuns at Burberry’s Winter 2025 show

LONDON: British Moroccan model Nora Attal turned heads this week at Burberry’s Winter 2025 showcase, held on Monday at London’s Tate Britain. 

She donned a long black faux fur coat, cinched at the waist with a belt, with an oversized silhouette. Underneath, the catwalk star wore a matching set consisting of a brown collared top and coordinating trousers, which peeked from beneath the coat. The sleeves of the top extend slightly beyond the coat’s cuffs. The outfit was completed with brown heels.

She donned a long black faux fur coat, cinched at the waist with a belt. (Getty Images)

A star-studded cast including Naomi Campbell; actors Lesley Manville, Richard E. Grant, and Elizabeth McGovern; and Lila Moss, daughter of supermodel Kate Moss, modelled creative director Daniel Lee's fifth collection for the British brand.

Besides Attal’s coat, Burberry’s winter 2025 collection also featured leather trench coats, velvet brocade suits and equestrian styles like jodhpur trousers and high leather boots.

The catwalk was carpeted in bright blue, a colour Lee has made his trademark at Burberry, and the museum's neoclassical architecture was complemented by drapes with an impressionist prints inspired by great British landscape artists.

A star-studded cast including Naomi Campbell  modelled creative director Daniel Lee's fifth collection for the British brand. (Getty Images)

The collection’s color palette of warm browns, greys and taupe also evoked the British countryside, with some red and yellow accents.

Jacquard-woven trenches and brocade jackets were inspired by the tapestries and wallpaper of stately homes, with silk pyjama shirts and trousers evoking domesticity.

“It’s that great Friday night exodus from London to the countryside for long rainy walks and to disconnect in the great outdoors,” Lee said of his inspiration for the collection.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Burberry (@burberry)

Accessories included oversized scarves with chunky fringes and leather boots featuring Burberry's signature check.

It is the second show since CEO Joshua Schulman took the reins at Burberry and began implementing a new strategy focused on outerwear, scarves, and marketing the brand’s British heritage in a bid to turn sales around.

In keeping with its renewed emphasis on scarves, Burberry sent each guest a dark green and navy check scarf along with their invitation.

It was the closing show of London Fashion Week, the second leg of the Autumn/Winter 2025 catwalk calendar, which began in New York and will go to Milan and Paris.


Nadim Karam talks Japanese inspiration, realities of artistic work 

Nadim Karam talks Japanese inspiration, realities of artistic work 
Updated 25 February 2025
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Nadim Karam talks Japanese inspiration, realities of artistic work 

Nadim Karam talks Japanese inspiration, realities of artistic work 

DUBAI: Fresh off a group exhibition in Dubai, titled “The Sublime Nature of Being,” Arab News spoke to Lebanese artist and architect Nadim Karam about his inspirations, the power of mentorship and the “beating clock in the upper pocket of (his) shirt.”
The multi-disciplinary creative focuses on sculptures in varying scales, as well as works on paper and site-specific public art projects. 

The multi-disciplinary creative focuses on sculptures in varying scales. (Supplied)


He most recently took part Dubai-based exhibition “The Sublime Nature of Being,” a collaboration with ICD Brookfield Arts program, where he showcased his polished stainless steel “Silent Thinker.”
“‘Silent Thinker’ is about total silence, or the inner void that strives to reach the sublime… the clarity found in inward silence is both oppositional and complementary to the stimulus and inspiration that can be found in the thriving, multi-cultural scene of Dubai,” he explained. 
Karam’s formative years in Lebanon and his doctoral studies in Japan continue to be defining influences in his work. He studied under Japanese architects Fumihiko Maki, Tadao Ando, and Hiroshi Hara, who died in January. 


“Professor Hara… profoundly influenced my thinking process. The most critical thing I learned from him is the discipline of applying a philosophical concept to a creative process and coming up with a product, which could be an architectural building, a sculpture or a designed object,” Karam said. 
“Through his diverse studies — Buddhist philosophies and the double negation of Arazu-Arazu, his research on villages worldwide, and his deep interest in mathematics, music and cosmology — he taught me to widen my vision of the world and continuously ‘move on the edge of loose boundaries’ for a better understanding and acceptance of the complex world around me.”

(Supplied)


Hara, the architect known for designing Kyoto Station Building and Osaka’s Umeda Sky Building, is the mind behind award-winning buildings including the Tasaki Museum of Art in Nagano Prefecture and Yamato International Inc.’s Tokyo office in Ota Ward in Japan.
Karam’s paintings and sculptures have been exhibited worldwide and in 2002, he co-chaired the UN/New York University conference in London for the reconstruction of Kabul, Afghanistan. 
When donning his curator’s hat — Karam was Lebanon’s curator at the 2003 Rotterdam Biennale, among other showcases — he believes his role is to facilitate the artist’s vision. 

(Supplied)


“I would give priority to the artist, being one myself! When the artist has given their fullest, the work should touch the visitor. In the process of the development of a work, the most important thing is to be true to oneself, irrelevant of any other consideration. Then the curator’s role is to put the works in the context of the where, how, and what,” he explained. 
With such a diverse schedule, it is a wonder the artist has time to himself to work — the ticking clock is something Karam says he is mindful of.
“The beating clock in the upper pocket of my shirt is always pushing me forward, sending me warnings and scheduling my work; especially in the case of the production of sculptures and public art projects which necessitates a complex structured mechanism which can involve hundreds of people, depending on the scale and nature of the work,” he said, noting that writing and painting are creative outlets that offer him the chance to slow down.
“During these times when I am alone, even the notion of the clock disappears, and only the painting remains.”


From Ashi Studio to Elie Saab, Arab designers dress stars at SAG Awards

From Ashi Studio to Elie Saab, Arab designers dress stars at SAG Awards
Updated 24 February 2025
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From Ashi Studio to Elie Saab, Arab designers dress stars at SAG Awards

From Ashi Studio to Elie Saab, Arab designers dress stars at SAG Awards

DUBAI: From Ashi Studio to Elie Saab, Arab designers dressed a handful of celebrities at Hollywood's Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday night.

Saudi designer Mohammed Ashi dressed US actress Ali Ahn, who stars in Netflix’s “The Diplomat.” Ahn stepped out in a cream, sculptural look from the Paris-based designer who helms haute couture label Ashi Studio.

Ali Ahn stepped out in a cream, sculptural look from the Paris-based designer who helms haute couture label Ashi Studio. (Getty Images)

Ahn’s “The Diplomat” co-star Keri Russell attended the ceremony in an all-black look by Lebanese designer Zuhair Murad, hailing from his Fall/Winter 2024 ready-to-wear collection. The fitted gown featured a deep sweetheart neckline and thigh-high slit, as well as detailing on one shoulder.

Keri Russell attended the ceremony in an all-black look by Lebanese designer Zuhair Murad. (Getty Images)

Lebanon was also represented by designer Elie Saab, who dressed Kaitlyn Dever, Leighton Meester and Sofia Carson.

Singer and actress Carson continued her love affair with powerhouse Lebanese designers with the SAG Awards appearance, months after she showed off looks by Elie Saab and Zuhair Murad during international performances alongside legendary Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli.

On Sunday, Carson opted for a baby pink gown from Saab’s Spring/ Summer 2025 couture line, complete with an elegant train and elegant draping over one shoulder.

Sofia Carson opted for a baby pink gown from Saab’s Spring/ Summer 2025 couture line. (Getty Images)

Meester also picked her look from one of Saab’s 2025 collections, but the TV star chose a column gown from his Spring/ Summer 2025 ready-to-wear line. The Lebanese designer’s Spring/Summer 2025 collection was inspired by the “sun-soaked savannah,” according to show notes, and this look was no exception.

Crafted from raffia-style fabric, the look harked back to safari wear without falling into tired cliches.

Meanwhile, “Ticket to Paradise” actress Dever showed off a peach-toned column gown with paillettes across the length of the dress.

US actress Marissa Bode shone a spotlight on Lebanese Italian designer Tony Ward. (Getty Images)

US actress Marissa Bode shone a spotlight on Lebanese Italian designer Tony Ward by opting for a ballgown from his Spring/ Summer 2025 collection. The gown featured an exaggerated Cinderella-style skirt with embellishments across the length of the dark tulle.