Not Milan. Not Paris. The next fashion power moves are happening in Jakarta, Lagos and Mumbai
For decades, fashion influence moved in one direction, from the West to everywhere else. That centre of gravity is shifting.
We are seeing it in real time. Jakarta’s streetwear collectives shaping regional drops. Lagos Fashion Week becoming a global scouting ground. Mumbai quietly anchoring retail and brand strategy for everyone from luxury conglomerates to fast-scaling D2C labels.
These are not emerging markets chasing validation. They are cultural epicentres setting the tone. And for fashion brands operating in or entering India and Southeast Asia, this shift changes how influence is built and where stories need to originate.
Influence has gone local and that is where global brands must look
A few years ago, an international client planned to launch in India with a pan-Asia campaign built out of Singapore. The content was strong. The design was polished. But it lacked texture.
We re-centred the strategy around Mumbai. Not as an execution hub, but as a narrative core. That is where fashion editors lived. Where stylists, luxury journalists and creator networks intersected. Where the story could breathe.
The result was not just more coverage. It was relevance.
Mumbai’s fashion voice is evolving on its own terms
India’s fashion capital is no longer borrowing cues. It is building a language of its own.
A blend of heritage and street culture. Craft paired with sharp utility. Independent designers operating with global ambition. Fashion shaped by film, music, food and digital culture, not filtered through Paris or New York first.
Brands that recognise this and participate honestly earn a depth of trust that cannot be bought through scale alone.
Fashion communications has to get off the plane
If your global PR playbook still relies on centralised content lightly adapted for local markets, you are not shaping the conversation. You are reacting to it.
Fashion today demands local faces, locally shot assets, regional creator voices and stories that belong to the culture rather than explain it.
We have worked with both global luxury brands and Indian startups that earned features in Vogue, Elle and GQ not by being louder, but by being grounded. By telling stories from here, not about here.
If you are in Mumbai, you are not on the periphery
The future of fashion is no longer defined by a single capital. It is being built across continents and cultures, often in places the industry once overlooked.
If you are building in India, Southeast Asia or Africa, you are not entering the global fashion conversation. You are shaping it.
And if your PR does not reflect that reality, it is not just outdated. It is invisible.
About Author

Vikram Kharvi
CEO, Bloomingdale PR
With over 27 years of experience, I specialize in transforming business challenges into opportunities through innovative marketing and PR strategies.
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