Branching out
October 28, 2005 | 12:00am
What began as a small stall in Greenhills soon morphed into a label that spawned more than 20 stores and advertising billboards that litter highways with big-name celebrity endorsers. Such are the stories of retail bigwigs. Just as Gap and Banana Republics humble beginnings changed radically, so has Plains & Prints fortunes.
Roxanne Ang-Farillas and her husband, Erickson, were in college when they began their business. When their little operation with Roxanne creating clothes and Erickson assisting in sales, generally in the direction of Roxannes classmates became profitable, the couple moved into a modest 10-square-meter stall in Shoppesville. One stall after another came and went, with the label currently tagging about 19 branches and 10 franchises all over the country.
Today Plains & Prints boasts not one but two celebrity endorsers. Gretchen Barretto opened the floodgates with a campaign that celebrated a kind of playful classicism. Her hair swept up, a smile perched on her lips, arms braced on her waist it is a picture of a confident woman, the kind who makes sensible choices but still has an offbeat sense of humor.
Its this lack of concern for trends that separates the label from the rest of the pack. Instead, Plains & Prints pieces are imbued with a kind of contemporary vibe. Puff sleeves are added to slim-fitting polos. Trousers are cut knee-length to achieve a boxy silhouette. Prints achieve a thinner, grainier effect on thin-as-air cotton. Jackets are ribbed with pale pink ribbons at the waist. Its the little details that make Plains & Prints collections current, but its their affinity for classic style that gives them charm.
Their latest celebrity endorser doesnt veer away much from the labels formula: take one classic beauty, pair it with a zany sense of humor mixed with an artless sincerity.
Denise Keller is the last girl youd expect to be a model. Not that shes lacking in the looks department quite the opposite, in fact. Rather, her oddball behavior makes her a standout in a crowd of cool and composed models too busy preening and looking beautiful to even laugh at a joke. The kind of behavior documented on Denises shows on MTV, where she is a VJ, makes her seem like the kind of girl youd find at a coffee shop, trading jokes with the guys on a couch in a corner. But there she is smiling down from a billboard with a Ford Supermodel of the World title tucked somewhere in her resume her model persona miles away from the kind of laid-back, laugh-out-loud personality she presents on screen. Which makes her, oddly enough, perfect for Plains & Prints.
She says candidly, "I can look at my life and say, I love what I do and Im lucky to get to do what I love."
Plains & Prints boutiques are located at SM City North Edsa, SM Megamall, Shangri-La Plaza Mall, Alabang Town Center, SM Sucat, Robinsons Galleria, Market Market, Robinsons Place Manila.
Roxanne Ang-Farillas and her husband, Erickson, were in college when they began their business. When their little operation with Roxanne creating clothes and Erickson assisting in sales, generally in the direction of Roxannes classmates became profitable, the couple moved into a modest 10-square-meter stall in Shoppesville. One stall after another came and went, with the label currently tagging about 19 branches and 10 franchises all over the country.
Today Plains & Prints boasts not one but two celebrity endorsers. Gretchen Barretto opened the floodgates with a campaign that celebrated a kind of playful classicism. Her hair swept up, a smile perched on her lips, arms braced on her waist it is a picture of a confident woman, the kind who makes sensible choices but still has an offbeat sense of humor.
Its this lack of concern for trends that separates the label from the rest of the pack. Instead, Plains & Prints pieces are imbued with a kind of contemporary vibe. Puff sleeves are added to slim-fitting polos. Trousers are cut knee-length to achieve a boxy silhouette. Prints achieve a thinner, grainier effect on thin-as-air cotton. Jackets are ribbed with pale pink ribbons at the waist. Its the little details that make Plains & Prints collections current, but its their affinity for classic style that gives them charm.
Their latest celebrity endorser doesnt veer away much from the labels formula: take one classic beauty, pair it with a zany sense of humor mixed with an artless sincerity.
Denise Keller is the last girl youd expect to be a model. Not that shes lacking in the looks department quite the opposite, in fact. Rather, her oddball behavior makes her a standout in a crowd of cool and composed models too busy preening and looking beautiful to even laugh at a joke. The kind of behavior documented on Denises shows on MTV, where she is a VJ, makes her seem like the kind of girl youd find at a coffee shop, trading jokes with the guys on a couch in a corner. But there she is smiling down from a billboard with a Ford Supermodel of the World title tucked somewhere in her resume her model persona miles away from the kind of laid-back, laugh-out-loud personality she presents on screen. Which makes her, oddly enough, perfect for Plains & Prints.
She says candidly, "I can look at my life and say, I love what I do and Im lucky to get to do what I love."
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