Bambah

This Mobile Boutique Brings Summer Fashion Right to the Beach

This Mobile Boutique Brings Summer Fashion Right to the Beach

The Bambah mobile boutique hits the beaches of Northern Egypt. Photo courtesy Bambah
Dubai-based fashion line and boutique Bambah is hitting the streets and sandy beaches of the North Coast of Egypt, known as Sahel, with a “mobile” boutique pop-up truck. The vehicle will move from one destination to another throughout the summer and park in prominent destinations in different resorts. Created by Bambah’s in-house design team, the truck follows the same aesthetics of the brand’s retail outlets in Dubai and Cairo. It is an extension of Bambah’s newly launched ‘Resort’ division, which focuses on an accessible resort wear line with easy-to-wear pieces. Fitted with a changing room, air conditioning, and display tables that showcase clothing and accessory collections, the truck aims to engage guests in a fun and unique way.

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Bambah’s Resort 21 collection will also be presented in a beach fashion show in Kiki’s Beach Club in Hacienda White on August 5 with a backdrop of the Mediterranean Sea. The show will have a casual, cozy set up in a blue and white nautical theme, evoking Alexandrian summer days of the 1970s. From curated floral off-duty summer dresses and lightweight beach cover-ups to trendy summer kaftans, nautical stripes, and elegant linen sets, the statement collection embodies luxurious fabrics, lady-like silhouettes, and striking hues. Generous ruffles, bare shoulders, oversized bows, and colorful floral prints are front and center of the line, making it versatile for occasions such as weddings and red carpets, as well as for anywhere with sunshine.
Inside the Bambah mobile boutique hits the beaches of Northern Egypt. Photo courtesy Bambah
Egyptian entrepreneur and founder of the brand, Maha Abdul Rasheed, says, “I wanted to create something extraordinary… something young, fresh, and flirty; I wanted the girls to be striking and the sun shining.” Since its inception in 2010, Bambah has picked up momentum with HM Queen Rania, Aishwarya Rai, Priyanka Chopra, Amal Clooney, Maisie Williams, Dita Von Teese, and Emma Roberts, who have all worn pieces from the brand.

Support Local Designers While Doing Your Ramadan Shopping at This New Exhibition in Dubai

Support Local Designers While Doing Your Ramadan Shopping at This New Exhibition in Dubai

Salama Khalfan and Ghizlan Guenez. Photo: Courtesy of Sawa
A new exhibition bringing together local designers, business owners, and creatives under one roof is set to take off today, April 7. Named Sawa (meaning together), the pre-Ramadan initiative was launched by Emirati jewelry designer Salama Khalfan and co-founder of The Modist Ghizlan Guenez. With a shared goal and strong motivation, the two entrepreneurs teamed up on the exhibition to help the local businesses and talents that have been severely affected by the Covid-19 pandemic and boost the UAE’s creative scene.

Ahead of Sawa’s opening at Alserkal Avenue today, we caught up with Guenez and Salama to know more about their initiative, how it all began and what visitors can expect from the exhibition.
How did this collaboration come to be?
Ghizlan: Salama and I have been friends for a long time. We are close friends, we’re both entrepreneurs and we’re both in the same space — the fashion and creative industries. About three weeks ago, over dinner at hers, we were talking about Covid-19 and the impact the pandemic has had on all of us. We were saying how for the first time, all of us in the world are struggling with the same thing and experiencing the same challenge.
Salama was also talking about her frustration with how the brands who used to be able to pay fees in Ramadan exhibitions in the past, can no longer do the same today given the impact and given how their businesses have been challenged by the pandemic.  She threw the idea and said let’s do something together to support the system and it didn’t take me a second to jump on it. Within minutes, we were sitting with a pen and paper and our notepads and just jotting down what we needed to do, how we needed to put it together, who’s in our network, who could potentially reach out to to get support from, and that’s how the idea was born.
Farha Designs. Photo: Courtesy
What can visitors expect from the exhibition?
Ghizlan and Salama: We have around 58 brands at the exhibition. They’re brands that we know and love but there are also some brands that are going to be discovered by shoppers at the exhibitions.
There’s a combination of established local and regional designers like Shatha Essa, Dima Ayad, Bambah, Bouguessa, Odeem, and then there are others who are local designers or designers based in the UAE which the shoppers may not have heard of before but have beautiful products.
It’s all curated in a way that is relevant to the month of Ramadan, including some exclusive pieces that have been created for Sawa itself. It’s a space where there are beautiful products. Still, there’s also incredible positive energy of collaboration and coming together. Truly the intention of supporting one and the other, being part of this ecosystem and uplifting it, given that we’re all in it together.
Bouguessa. Photo: Courtesy
Why is it important to support local designers and businesses at such a time?
Ghizlan: Salama says you can’t achieve any success in-silo. If any of us want to succeed, all of us must uplift one another; we’ve all been impacted. There’s a level of empathy around what is happening around us, and it is essential that a collaborative effort must take place during these times, in our industry, and that’s actually one of our goals.
By launching the Sawa initiative, other people in other industries and spaces would be inspired by the collaboration and do the same, and scale really almost doesn’t matter. We could do it amongst five friends and do things to support each other’s businesses, or we could do it on a larger scale like Sawa. It’s a time when coming together and supporting one another is probably more important than any other time.
Frou-Frou. Photo: Courtesy
In your opinion, what makes this exhibition stand out from others?
Ghizlan and Salama: The most important aspect of the exhibition is the fact that it was created to eliminate the barriers to entry into these exhibitions for brands. From our perspective as its creators, this is not a commercial exhibition. We have leveraged our network to create it — whether it is a free space from Alserkal Avenue, or the company that is helping us set up the event, Khayali Boutique. It’s all been a work of leveraging our network as two entrepreneurs and people from this industry and so we’ve passed on the minimal cost to the brand.
The largest space, which is a booth — in all transparency — is two meters by around 2.4m by 2.4m that costs AED 5,000 for the period of four days and so the idea was that we don’t want these brands to incur costs. We want them to do well, be exposed, and have an opportunity to offer their products under a beautiful umbrella. We’ve also worked on not compromising the curation and selecting brands and products while doing this for a good cause to support the ecosystem.
Again, we are customers, we enjoy shopping, so we wanted every woman who visits Sawa to experience the same.
Salama Khalfan Jewelry. Photo: Courtesy
How long did it take to put the exhibition together?
It took us less than a month. I believe it’s been about three weeks now. It’s a super small team. There are four of us, including myself and Salama, so it’s been full-on. When you start something to support and see a beautiful objective materialize, you push through.
We are entrepreneurs and used to coming up with an idea and executing it immediately, and that spirit is evident in us working together. Doing it together, we share the same sentiment, and we feel great that we have done it together because there is big support from one another, and we jointly feel very strong about the cause.
Nour Hefzi Photo: Courtesy
What is next for Sawa?
Ghizlan and Salama: Sawa started with a good intention. It began with an objective to support, and not as a hugely strategized idea. It was empathy and the need and desire to do something that brought us together in executing this idea.
Having said that, we do feel that it’s gained momentum with the support of everyone that’s been part of it. It’s a community of effort. It’s not two people; it’s not four people. It’s everyone, including Vogue Arabia, and every person who has supported us in one way or another. So it truly is a beautiful form of a community coming together to create this event — in a way that we hoped for but did not necessarily expect.
We believe that it’s going to be just the beginning of this platform supporting regional designers. We are looking at how we can continue to give it life and to fulfill the same objective.
Sawa is taking place at Warehouse 83, Alserkal Avenue, from 2pm to 10pm.
Read Next: The Best of Regional Designers from Arab Fashion Week 2021

Bambah Celebrates Ten Years with this Photo Diary

Bambah Celebrates Ten Years with this Photo Diary

“It’s a major milestone,” acknowledges Maha Abdul Rasheed. The founder of Dubai-based Bambah celebrates ten years in the making this month. The Egyptian founder reflects on a decade of success. “Bambah was officially launched as the first, real vintage boutique in the Middle East,” she says. “I’ve always had a passion for vintage and I […]
The post Bambah Celebrates Ten Years with this Photo Diary appeared first on Vogue Arabia.

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