Anaka Narayanan studied Economics at a small liberal arts college
called Reed College in Portland, Oregon (US), more than a decade ago.
She was interested in development economics and all her internships up
until then were related to education and rural development in India. But
circumstances were such that she ended up working at an economic
analysis firm (NERA) in New York city after college.
“I wasn’t passionate about the work I did there (class action
lawsuits), but I loved the city. I was earning a salary for the first
time, and I started taking more effort over the way I dressed,”
remembers Ananka. This was the Summer of 2004. It was during this time
that she thought about starting a fashion label. The idea began more out
of personal necessity. “When I went shopping in New York I saw a lot of
silhouettes that I liked, and I admired the clean lines and neat
tailoring. However, I longed to see those silhouettes in hand-crafted
and hand-woven fabrics that I was familiar with,” says Anaka.
Ananka also had a history with retail. Her mother co-founded a sari
retail store when Anaka was born. Her mother’s taste in handwoven,
block-printed and ikat sarees influenced Anaka’s taste in textiles and
fashion. “When I made trips to Chennai while I was working in New York, I
was disappointed that I couldn’t find affordable brands that used
Indian textiles on modern silhouettes,” says Anaka. Everything she found
seemed loose and shapeless- far from the fashion-forward silhouettes
she saw in New York. She felt there had to be a strong need for what she
was looking for and thus was born Brass Tacks which means coming back
to the basics.
She moved back to Chennai in the Summer of 2006 and started her own
fashion label. She intended to find a designer partner and take's care of
the business side herself but on advice of a friend, she took up
designing and is now in a position where she wants to focus only on the
design side. But she has managed to both over the last six years and
currently manages a team of 25 that run Brass Tacks.
Brass Tacks has a blossomed retail outlet in Chennai and plan to open
one more in the next six months. They retail out of boutiques in Goa
and Bangalore along with an online store which pushes their sales. “The
business is now at a stage where we have to expand. Aside from growing
the online store, I’m thinking of starting another line that has more
flowing, draped silhouettes. We’re also going to experiment with men’s
shirts,” says Anaka.
This season, the Brass Tacks team has gone back to its core
philosophy: translating hand- crafted textiles into cosmopolitan
silhouettes. The difference is that in this collection there’s a
stronger emphasis on the textiles and the craft of making the textile
itself. The garments in this collection are, therefore, a mere
interpretation of these textile crafts for an urban audience.
Source : http://yourstory.in/2013/10/brass-tacks-anaka-narayanan/
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