Coming back to paparazzi is intimidating: Kangana Ranaut

As she walked the ramp for designer Anju Modi at the ongoing Couture Week, she tripped but took it sportingly.

July 17, 2014 10:29 am | Updated 10:29 am IST - New Delhi

Kangana Ranaut displays a dress created by Indian designer Anju Modi at the India Couture Week. Photo: AP

Kangana Ranaut displays a dress created by Indian designer Anju Modi at the India Couture Week. Photo: AP

Actress Kangana Ranaut, who was away from the limelight to pursue her filmmaking course in New York, is back with a bang. However, she finds the paparazzi “intimidating” and is still adjusting to all the attention.

As she walked the ramp for designer Anju Modi at the ongoing Couture Week, she tripped but took it sportingly.

“I am just back from New York. It was like going back to school. This is my first public outing after coming back from New York. So I took it in a very easy way but it was not. Coming back to paparazzi was intimidating. I couldn’t believe I was back here,” she said after the show.

The “Queen” fame actress, who was wearing a heavily embroidered black lehanga-choli, said she was an avid supporter of Indian wear. “It’s not that I don’t support Indian creation. In fact, I wore a lot of AM:PM (a designer label) during the promotion of ‘Queen’. They wanted me to wear Indian clothes,” she told IANS.

“However, it’s sad that we are getting lot westernised, the way parties are held, the way we dress up, everything has got westernised. If I go to a party wearing an Indian dress like this, I don’t know how the media would react,” she added.

Kangana has created a niche for herself with films like “Fashion” and “Queen” and has garnered appreciation for her out-of-the-box choices.

She believes there is still a long way to go. “I am not a global artist,” she said. Designer Anju Modi called her collection “Manikarnika” — that reflects a woman of the past, reborn in the present. The collection was an exploration of the age-old craft and ancient techniques.

The embroideries were derived from the architecture, with the paintings of the Ajanta-Ellora caves as perfect muses to the artwork and details. The colour palette mirrored the earthy, sepia tones like sand, old rose, reminiscent of the past centuries. The rich jewel tones of burgundy, ruby, emerald added to the plushness of luxury. The designer said Indian art and craft was getting a lot of global attention.

“Indian crafts, the colours, the sensibilities, the artistry and the architecture have become very international. There is no boundary, it’s like a global village. There is a lot of fusion happening, so even if you wear a T-shirt and it has embroidery, then you are wearing an Indian design,” she told IANS.

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