Welcome to our newest editorial initiative, Who What Wear Spotlight, where we’ll be using our editorial platform, social following, and ad inventory to turn the spotlight on small businesses that need our support now more than ever. Each week, we’ll be highlighting a new fashion or beauty company. If you own a small brand and would like to be considered for the program, please apply here.
Since the pandemic hit, many industries have been flipped on their heads. Within the fashion world, everything from scale and consumerism to luxury and runway has been brought into question. Fashion brands on all levels are forced right now to consider their place and reposition themselves for a different economy and lifestyle. Fashion designer Roopa Pemmaraju is employing the sustainable and socially responsible ethos she’s always had to guide herself and her eponymous label through it. Her luxury brand employs artisans in her hometown of Bangalore, India, and her main priority has been ensuring her employees still have work and income during these turbulent times. It’s meant finding a solution that could justify reopening cotton mills and digital printers so the artisans can get back to work. Face masks, to no surprise, were the answer.
Tell us about yourself and your business.
I’m Roopa Pemmaraju. I am the founder of the namesake company. I was born and raised in Bengaluru, India, and started my company in Melbourne, Australia. I currently live in New York. My brand, Roopa Pemmaraju, is a slow luxury fashion brand, with an emphasis on sustainability and social responsibility. Every garment we create uses natural materials and processes that are carbon-neutral, with each sale going back to supporting the skilled artisans and their families.
And if you had to sum up your business in five or so words?
Socially conscious, sustainable, luxury slow fashion.
What inspired you to start your business?
When I grew up in Bangalore and later moved to Australia, I became infatuated with the patterns used in indigenous Australian and Indian art. While living in Australia, I had the idea of using their art and putting it onto garments, then giving back to the talented artisans in this region. I felt that indigenous Australian and Indian cultures, who are known for their textiles and pattern work, were not being properly represented in the fashion industry as much as they should be, and I wanted to showcase their work to a new set of eyes who would appreciate it while giving back to the talented people who create these works of art. I started this brand on the value of supporting the artisans through the craft they worked hard to perfect and keeping these traditions alive so the next generation can learn and enjoy them.
How have social distancing and stay-at-home orders affected your business? How have your priorities shifted?
They’ve had an impact on our business. Adjusting our atelier in Bangalore to be a place where all the artisans are safe took a little bit of time and adjusting. Adjusting to the stay-at-home orders has definitely affected me here in the States. I just moved to New York in September, and with the lockdowns and social distancing, it has been difficult to meet people in the industry. I had to approach this differently, utilizing more digital means to get in contact with my team and possible partners.
Another way the lockdowns have affected my business in the U.S. is that I have been unable to set up my office due to the lockdowns, and I had to become accustomed to working out of my 1200 square-foot apartment. I quickly learned it’s pretty hard to pack over 600 orders of face masks in such a small space, but I make it work.
Before all this was going on, we were focusing much more on ready-to-wear—now our focus has been more on our face-mask line. Due to the pandemic, we have been backlogged on masks, but the success of the line has allowed us to get our products in the hands of so many new customers while giving back to the artisans and lessening the struggle they are facing.
Can you tell us about your decision to sell face masks?
Certainly. Back in March, the pandemic was hitting both the United States and India very hard. A lot of companies were canceling orders, and many people were losing their jobs. In India, people were starving and losing their homes—the fear of starving was becoming a bigger fear than the virus itself. In the United States, the virus was spreading exponentially and many were dying, while the scarcity of face masks did not help the issue. It broke my heart to see both the place I live and the place I grew up hit so hard, and I knew I had to do something to help.
I did not have a lot of money and was left with a dilemma: Do I put the money back into my business to advertise and hopefully grow in the long run or give the money back to the artisans to help them in the present? I decided to give the money to the artisans, helping them afford their homes and put food onto the table. While they were able to sustain themselves for a short time, I had to come up with a way to get them back to work so we could continue to support them. We had a large collection of archival prints and hand-embroidered fabrics that we had not used, so I reworked them into face masks.
With no money to traditionally advertise them, I had to take a different approach. I posted the designs onto my social media platforms while also reaching out to publications and retailers. Luckily, we were shared by Vogue in their “Cloth Masks to Shop Now” article which became vital in bringing our products and ethos in front of as many as possible. Anthropologie also played a vital role, as minutes after I reached out, they responded saying they loved the masks and put in an order for 28,000 from our lower-priced line, which was still sustainable. I was ecstatic. I was finally able to get these digital printers, cotton mills, and artisans crafters back to work and provide a means in which they could start to support themselves and their families again. We donated thousands of masks in India and the U.S. to ensure the safety of our artisans and help stop the spread the best way we could.
The masks themselves are so beautiful. Can you tell us about how you approached designing them?
When I was first creating our mask line, I used prints and hand-embroidered designs from our archives, giving designs we hadn’t used a new life. We have begun to use patterns and designs from our newer collections to add depth and diversity to each collection. We always try to incorporate hand embroidery into as many designs as we can. It takes a lot of skill to create but adds exquisite details that people love, and this hand process will hold up for years. We encourage our garments to be passed down through generations just like the processes we use.
How is selling face masks allowing your business to give back?
Selling face masks has allowed us to continue supporting the artisans when they need it most since all the proceeds going back to them. We’ve not only been able to help the artisans get back to work but also the digital printers and cotton mills. Each sale of a face mask allows us to donate a mask back to one of the artisans and gives them a means to put food on the table and keep their homes. In a less developed country like India, many people live day to day or week to week—not working could cause them to become homeless or starve.
Can you tell us why you feel so passionately about giving back as a business owner?
I feel that as a business owner, it’s my responsibility to protect the planet and people who work hard to create these beautiful garments. When I had to decide where to put the last of my money, I chose the artisans because these are real people who needed my help now more than ever. They did not know what they were going to do for work to feed their families and keep roofs over their heads. Seeing these people starving, and some even taking their own lives, due to this is what makes me feel so passionately about giving back and ultimately prompted my decision to do so.
I wanted to support them at that moment so I could lessen the impact while searching for a more sustainable solution. Looking back, I know I made the right decision in the early days, and now with this face mask line, they are able to have a job and be in a better place than they were before. Going forward, I hope to provide more for them.
What has been your proudest moment as a business owner?
Right now. Being able to save the lives of many artisans through the creation of a solution that benefits a whole community is what makes me proud. We are able to keep great people here with us and sustain lives and livelihoods. Our collaboration with Anthropologie helped in this mission, as the lower-priced collection provides a sustainable and colorful product everyone can enjoy while helping the people in our Bengaluru atelier struggle less. Being able to positively have an impact on people in both the U.S. and in India has been my proudest moment.
Let’s give a little spotlight love to other brands. What are 2-3 of your favorite brands you like to support and why?
Ming Yu Wang, a jewelry company designed by Jennifer Wang. I love her designs as they are so timeless but truly embody wearable art. Another part of Ming Yu Wang that makes me love to support them is their focus on sustainability. They use 100% recycled brass and .925 sterling silver. Along with the use of recycled materials, they donate 10% of their online sales to World Wildlife Fund.
Jolii Cosmetics, a cosmetics company by Sasha Suresh, who grew up in India and Thailand. I like supporting Jolii Cosmetics because all of their cosmetics are cruelty-free, natural, and vegan. I love supporting brands who care as much about the environment and social responsibility as much as we do.
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