Saudi 100 Brands fashion exhibition makes its way to Milan

Fashion label Qoftan will showcase its latest line at the event. (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 24 September 2022
Follow

Saudi 100 Brands fashion exhibition makes its way to Milan

  • The Saudi 100 Brands show is a traveling exhibition featuring a curated selection of clothing and accessories from the Kingdom

DUBAI: One hundred Saudi fashion designers will show off their latest collections at an international wholesale exhibition during Milan Fashion Week from Sept. 22-25

The Saudi Fashion Commission collaborated with WHITE Milano, which stages the ExpoWhite exhibition, to organize the showcase.

The Saudi 100 Brands exhibition features 80 female designers from the Kingdom.

“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has a rich culture shaped by the diversity of its people, traditions and heritage. Through Saudi 100 Brands we will honour artisan tradition, embrace technology, nurture creativity, and inspire the next generation of Saudi designers to share their talents with the world. We would like to express our gratitude to WHITE for creating ExpoWhite, a unique program that builds a bridge between fashion creatives and the international fashion community,” said Burak Cakmak, Chief Executive Officer of the Saudi Fashion Commission, in a released statement.

“We are excited to launch ExpoWhite and profile a new generation of designers and brands from diverse backgrounds on the global fashion stage. Saudi 100 brands will celebrate Saudi’s local fashion talents and showcase the Kingdom’s growing fashion industry to a new audience,” commented Brenda Bellei, Chief Executive Officer of WHITE.

Brands on show include Adelfes, Almuhaisen Jewellery, Atelier Hekayat, Bovenue - By Sadeem, Charmaleena, Dazluq, Dollybrand, Eman Joharjy, Kaf By Kaf, Khawla Al-Aiban, Lillian Ismail, Loomer Jewellery and Lurline. 

The news comes after the Saudi 100 Brands initiative staged a show in New York this summer.

The designers were chosen from a pool of 1,500 and finalized into the top 100 based on their pieces.


Arab films win at Berlin International Film Festival

Updated 22 February 2026
Follow

Arab films win at Berlin International Film Festival

DUBAI: Two films by Arab filmmakers won top prizes at the 76th edition of the Berlin International Film Festival, where filmmakers used their time on stage to advocate for a free Palestine.

Lebanese director Marie-Rose Osta, accepting the Golden Bear for best short film for “Someday, a child,” denounced Israeli bombings in her home country and what she described as a “collapse of international law” in the region.

“In reality children in Gaza, in all of Palestine, and in my Lebanon do not have superpowers to protect them from Israeli bombs,” she said. “No child should need superpowers to survive a genocide empowered by veto powers and the collapse of international law … If this Golden Bear means anything, let it mean that Lebanese and Palestinian children are not negotiable,” she said.

Abdallah Al-Khatib, winner of the best documentary prize for “Chronicles from a Siege,” brought a Palestinian flag on stage, and called out the German government for what he called its “complicity” in Israeli “genocide” in Gaza.  

“We will remember everyone who stood with us, and we will remember everyone who stood against us, against our right to live with dignity, or those who chose to be silent. Free Palestine from now until the end of the world,” he said.

Opening the awards ceremony, Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle addressed the controversy surrounding this year’s festival, as artists called out Berlinale for not taking a stance on Palestine. She described this year’s festival as having “felt raw and fractured,” with many attendees arriving in Berlin “with grief and anger and urgency about the world that takes place outside the cinema walls.

“That grief, that anger and that urgency is real and belongs in our community. We hear you,” Tuttle said.