What We Are Buying Today: Arte, where one-line art meets espadrilles

1 / 2
2 / 2
Short Url
Updated 24 February 2023
Follow

What We Are Buying Today: Arte, where one-line art meets espadrilles

Arte is a Saudi fashion brand that offers custom-made espadrilles inspired by one-line art — a style that seeks to produce a meaningful drawing with a single line.

In 2020, the brand began designing women’s espadrilles, using modern technology and environmentally friendly materials to produce a range of products.

Espadrilles are most popular in Spain, and are worn at work for a casual or sporty look, or while running errands during the day.

Arte produced more than 1,000 shoes in a range of styles within two years of launching the product.

The brand’s espadrilles are comfortable, with a nonslip rubber, breathable and soft insole, and are made with environmentally friendly materials, such as esparto rope, as well as natural and soft linen.

Arte now offers nearly 20 products and collections of shoes, pouches, laptop bags, headscarves, nail art, stickers and accessories, all featuring one-line art illustrations.

It has taken its art and design to another level by offering linen abayas decorated with line art embroidery. These are made on request, and are available in colors including beige, white, blue, and black and white.

A custom-made abaya takes one to two weeks to complete and prices range from SR500 ($130) to SR700. For more information visit Instagram @arte.artistic.


Fashion world pays tribute to Valentino

Updated 20 January 2026
Follow

Fashion world pays tribute to Valentino

DUBAI: Models, celebrities and designers have paid tribute to Valentino Garavani, who died earlier this week at the age of 93.

The Italian designer, known for his high-glamour gowns and his signature shade of red, was a fashion show mainstay for nearly half a century.

Instagram/ @monatougaard

Among those honoring him was model Mona Tougaard, who walked in his 2024 show. The Danish model, who has Turkish, Somali and Ethiopian heritage, shared the news on Instagram with a broken-heart emoji.

Dubai-based Hollywood star Lindsay Lohan also paid tribute by resharing a photo of herself with Garavani from a fan account, adding a broken-heart emoji and a bird emoji.

Instagram/ @lindsaylohan

Lebanese designer Nicolas Jebran shared an image of the designer on his Instagram story, joining the wave of tributes from across the fashion world.

Known universally by his first name, Valentino was adored by generations of royals, first ladies and movie stars, from Jackie Kennedy Onassis to Julia Roberts and Queen Rania of Jordan, who all swore the designer always made them look and feel their best.

Though Italian-born and despite maintaining his atelier in Rome, he mostly unveiled his collections in Paris.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Valentino (@maisonvalentino)

Alessandro Michele, the current creative director of the Valentino fashion house, wrote on Instagram that he continues to feel Valentino’s “gaze” as he works on the next collection, which will be presented in Rome on March 12.

Valentino was born into a wealthy family in the northern Italian town of Voghera on May 11, 1932. He said it was his childhood love of cinema that set him down the fashion path.

“I was crazy for silver screen, I was crazy for beauty, to see all those movie stars being sensation, well dressed, being always perfect,” he said in a 2007 television interview.

After studying fashion in Milan and Paris, he spent much of the 1950s working for established Paris-based designer Jean Desses and later Guy Laroche before striking out on his own. He founded the house of Valentino on Rome’s Via Condotti in 1959.

Early fans included Italian screen sirens Gina Lollobrigida and Sophia Loren, as well as Hollywood stars Elizabeth Taylor and Audrey Hepburn.

Over the years, Valentino’s empire expanded as the designer added ready-to-wear, menswear and accessories lines.