Creado por Neide Hall
El arte en trajes de baño hechos a mano en Brasil // excepcionalmente exóticos. Tejidos ecológicos, reversibles y SPF 50
Charmosa Swimwear’s collection was called Fireball, and that name about sums it up. Beat-heavy music by Shakira and Pitbull accented the red- and orange-hued bikinis, flowy sashays and lots of fringe.
Charmosa designer Neide Hall ended up winning the night’s award for Emerging Designer of the Year for the lifestyle category. Lifestyle was Thursday night’s classification of designer – evening wear and couture characterized Friday and Saturday, respectively.
I got to speak with Hall after the show about her big win.“I was very surprised,” she said. “It was a very tight competition… I’m very excited for 2016, what’s coming for me next.”The winning emerging designers get to be featured on retail network EVINE Live and win a $10,000 prize package of resources to help the brand. All emerging designers went through a 4-month designer bootcamp this year, a process Hall said was difficult but rewarding.“
They gave me a lot of guidance and made me open my eyes and really figure out how to sell,” Hall said. “As a designer, you love designing, but you mostly hate the business part… But I said, if I want to make this something, I really need to focus on my business part as well.”. - Downtown Devil
El arte en trajes de baño hechos a mano en Brasil // excepcionalmente exóticos. Tejidos ecológicos, reversibles y SPF 50
En Charmosa, priorizamos el uso de
materiales sostenibles y ecológicos, el agua utilizada en
el proceso de teñido a mano se recicla. Cada pieza de tejido sobrante del
proceso de corte se guarda y reutiliza como bordados, accesorios
u otro detalle especial en una de nuestras piezas.
Nuestra selección de tejidos son elegidos por su calidad,
comodidad y sostenibilidad. La calidad de nuestras piezas es evidente en su
atención al acabado y ajuste. Nuestras telas tienen un tacto delicado que
puede compararse con un tacto de seda, pero proporcionan protección SPF50. Nuestras
piezas desaparecen por completo después de tres años en un vertedero, sin
causar daño a nuestro planeta.