
RAFE NEW YORK WORKS WITH “DREAM WEAVERS” FOR
HIS INSPIRED SPRING 2010 COLLECTION
New York, NY, October 2009 – Designer Rafe Totengco continues to utilize the artistic talents of the people in his native Philippines. The designer’s latest collaboration features the work of the T'boli, one of the Philippines surviving ethnic tribes occupying an area in the southwest coastal range of the Cotabato Cordillera. This non-Muslim tribe is known for their skills in brass casting and traditional weaving, which creates a fabric called Tinalak.


The fabric is characterized by rhythmically repeated geometric patterns of highly stylized human and animal forms, some of which are said to represent human figures in traditional housing structures. The T'boli weaves this cloth using fibers from the abaca plant, a variety of the banana family. The fibers are extracted from the inner section of the wild banana plant, dried and separated into strands, then joined into long threads needed for weaving.


This is used as thread and binding material for Ikat, a decorative technique whereby threads are resist-tied and dyed into warp Ikat patterns before weaving. The dyes used are extracted from vegetables and other materials.
Karolina beaded flap clutch in orange.
Katherine large toteRafe has created a group of Beaded Ikat handbags with the Tinalak fabric in vibrant hues of orange, yellow, pink and blue. The bags come in three styles: a large tote, a flap clutch and a minaudiere. Each style comes in indigo blue, hot pink, orange, yellow and black. The clutch and the minaudiere feature hand beaded ornamentation that complement the colors of the bags.

Kim minaudiere

The Kim minaudiere as feature in Vogue Magazine.
This is not the only group in Rafe’s Spring 2010 collection to boast a connection to the designer’s birthplace. Craftwork, a capsule collection within the line, features crochet work done by 80 women in the Philippines utilizing plastic bags collected during school drives. Both endeavors allow Rafe to help provide work for each group and preserve their distinctive craft.
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