woman and man near loom

Romania's traditional blouse industry under threat by mass production of fake replicas

​​​​​​​The Romanian blouse, IA, is one of the best-known symbols of Romania’s culture. But cheap replicas manufactured in China and India threaten the future of the homegrown industry.

The World

In Bucharest, Romania, Mariana Neacșu works 12 hours almost every day, weaving intricate, white blouses on a large, wooden loom that once belonged to her mother.

The blouse, called IA, distinctive for its embroidered sleeves, is one of the best-known symbols of traditional dress in Romania.

“I started to really get into it because I love the traditional blouse,” Neacșu said through a translator about her hobby that grew into a unique family business.

woman by loom

Mariana Neacșu began sewing the IA blouse as a hobby about eight years ago.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World 

IA blouses take months, and sometimes, more than a year to complete, and can cost anywhere from $150 to over $2,000.

Neacșu said her customers are mainly Romanian, because tourists are reluctant to pay the price. It’s partly why machine-made replicas from China and India sell so well in the outdoor markets in Bucharest. But some preservationists say that the fakes threaten to put Romania’s homegrown industry out of business.

workshop exterior

Mariana Neacșu's workshop in Bucharest, Romania.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

Andreea Diana Tănăsescu, the founder of La Blouse Roumaine, a movement that promotes IA, said that the blouse fell out of fashion in the 1990s as Romanians embraced Western culture following the collapse of communism.

In the last decade, though, the blouse has featured in collections by fashion designers including Tom Ford and Oscar de La Renta, and British singer Adele appeared in Vogue magazine wearing one. Interest in the garment spiked but with it came a flood of cheap knockoffs from factories in Asia.

spools of thread

Spools of thread on hand in Mariana Neacșu's workshop.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World 

Tănăsescu said she is frustrated that the government hasn’t made an effort to regulate the industry.

Some vendors, such as the Obor market in the northeast of the capital, claim to sell tops made in Romania, although the labels read IND, which usually indicates made in India, or they peddle “handmade” blouses priced at $22.

loom

Mariana Neacșu's workshop in Bucharest, Romania, has four looms, including one that belonged to her mother.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

Tănăsescu said that she hopes that IA’s listing by UNESCO as an “intangible cultural heritage” last December will encourage the government to be more proactive about clamping down on fakes. Or at the very least, force the stallholders to state if the blouses are machine-made and from abroad.

blouse

Fake replicas of the traditional blouse sell cheaply at local markets in Romania.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

But she said there’s a reason the authorities are slow to act: “It's about money, the copies are bringing in more money in taxes.”

The Romanian government is reluctant to lose any income the stallholders pay in tax, Tănăsescu said.

blouse

In the last decade, the IA blouse has featured in collections by fashion designers including Tom Ford and Oscar de La Renta, and British singer Adele appeared in Vogue magazine wearing one. Interest in the garment spiked but with it came a flood of cheap knockoffs from factories in Asia.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

Raluca Jurcovan, an artist in Bucharest who embroiders designs on IA, said it’s not just about money. The government appears to have no concept of traditional culture in Romania, she said.

blouse

Some vendors, such as the Obor market in the northeast of Bucharest, Romania, claim to sell tops made in the country, although the labels read IND, which usually indicates made in India, or they peddle “handmade” blouses priced at $22.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

“It’s just ignorance,” Jurcovan said. “We live in a modern society in which tradition doesn't mean anything. They are not interested in reading, or learning, or going to the countryside and to the villages that continue with these traditions.”

woman with blouse

Andreea Diana Tănăsescu holds up a blouse from Monica Miller's capsule collection, made in collaboration with traditional blouse-makers in Bihor, in western Romania.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

But there is a broader interest in IA, particularly among the Romanian diaspora.

Tănăsescu said many Romanian women living abroad have IA in their wardrobe, because it reminds them of their identity and origin.

mirror with woman in reflection

Andreea Diana Tănăsescu is the founder of La Blouse Roumaine, a movement that promotes IA.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World 

Tănăsescu’s grandmother made her own traditional blouses, which she passed onto her along with a love for the culture that informs them.

The blouse also has its own special day. Since 2013, IA has been celebrated on June 24 by diasporas around the world.

women sewing

The blouse, called IA, distinctive for its embroidered sleeves, is one of the best-known symbols of traditional dress in Romania. Women who help sew them at Mariana Neacșu's workshop in Bucharest come up with their own, unique designs.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World 

Fashion designer Monica Miller recently collaborated with artists from Bihor in western Romania to design a new capsule collection of blouses under a European Commission project, “Give (back) Credit to the Heritage Communities.”

WOMEN

Mariana Neacșu's workshop in Bucharest, Romania, where the IA are sewn, is one of a kind in the capital city.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World 

Tănăsescu said she wants to see more of this kind of collaboration between local blouse-makers and international designers.

Tănăsescu, who also occasionally joins a group of women sewers at Neacșu’s workshop on Fridays, said that making IA is therapeutic.

women

A group of women comes on Fridays to Mariana Neacșu's workshop to help sew their original designs onto the IA.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

It’s about companionship and exchanging ideas and discussing their original patterns.

woman with blouse

Artist Raluca Jurcovan, with the black sweater, works on a blouse.

Credit:

Raul Stef/The World

“It’s good for your mental health,” she said. “I call it yoga for the mind.”
 

Raul Stef contributed to reporting.
 

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