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ROMEO GIGLI interprets the tradition ROM

By: Patrick Battipaglia 02/01/2005


The customs and traditions of the Gypsy people of color illuminate the week of ' Haute couture Capitoline. Sunday, January 30, small outbreaks, roast pots and typical traditional Roma have animated the evening at the slaughterhouse in Testaccio, where Romeo Gigli has reinterpreted clothes made by Roma women is a long and painstaking research that involved three tailors Roma in the capital: Khorakhanè dressmakers, seamstresses Rumrìa Abruzzi Roma and Roma The old dressmaker dressmakers Khorakhanè are from Kosovo and Bosnia. Their field is close to the track, a short walk from the Basilica di San Paolo. The women of the group prefer soft cloth. Their model is the characteristic "Dimije" a kind of skirt - pants with the horse very low, but it is also known that scarf knotted in various ways over the head. The seamstresses Rumrìa Abruzzi Roma now living in Rome. Mandriane come from, an area known for the trade of horses. From their couture garments come in bright colors, reddish evoking the tradition of the Iberian Gypsies. The 'old tailor Rom led by Alessandra Carmen Rocco is a small laboratory that manufactures and sells traditional clothing inspired by the nineteenth century. The workers are girls who come from the Roma camps in Rome. The result is a parade of strong emotional connotations which smells, colors and dancers led the audience Roma Alta Moda Roman to live an unreal atmosphere. Romeo Gigli has once again proved his talent, reading, according to his personal interpretation of the history and aesthetics of the Roma people

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" Special AltaRoma 2005 "

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