Tag: afford

  • Poor Students Can’t Afford Admissions In Srinagar’s Business-Oriented Coaching Centres

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    Srinagar, Apr 30: In the absence of any regulating authority, Private Coaching Centres in Kashmir Valley especially Srinagar city are out to loot parents at sweet will.

    Middle-class families are finding it hard to get their wards admitted to private coaching centres.

    News Agency Kashmir News Trust has been receiving a plethora of texts from parents requesting to highlight the issue and the loot that is going on in Srinagar coaching centres in the name of education.

    “Asalamu Alaikum! Sir I request you to post about the hike in the fees in coaching centers in Parraypora Srinagar and others as well, as the fee has been raised abruptly from 40K to 80K and even more. And you might be knowing that it’s not everyone’s cup of tea We as members of middle-class families cannot afford such a huge amount with other expenses like hostel fees and all so. We request you to support us against this unlawful act by coaching centers. Your support can make it possible for every parent and student to make their dreams come true. Thank You,” reads one of the texts from an anxious student that KNT has received.

    The craze of studying at coaching centres and the paradigm shift of the formal schooling of students have given a boost to the coaching business in Kashmir Valley.

    Besides students from high and higher secondary classes, there are roughly 20,000 students who opt for private coaching for competing in NEET, JEE and other national-level exams.

    The amount that is being charged from the students in the name of fee varies from coaching centre to coaching centre at Parraypora, Raj Bagh and other parts of the city. Thousands of students mostly from rural areas can be seen thronging at different coaching centres at Parraypora which of late has been called the ‘Kota of Kashmir’.

    “It has become a prestige point for these coaching centres to charge as much as they can. These coaching centres attract the attention of the students through scholarships and other modes. In the absence of any regulation, they loot the parents at will,” said Muhammad Hanief who paid a hefty amount to get his daughter admitted at a coaching centre in Srinagar.

    Last year, a report claimed that excluding the fee charged for the class 9th to 12th coaching, each student is charged more than Rs 50K for the three months crash course offered by different coaching centres and the amount goes beyond Rs 70K to one lakh as well.

    “A poor can’t afford education in these business-oriented coaching centres. Ironically, the government that has been taking measures from time to time in regulating the functioning of these coaching centres has never bothered to take any decision about the fee structures of these coaching centres.

    An official from one of the coaching centres told KNT that they offer special discounts to students from poor backgrounds. To authenticate his claim, the official provided the name and cell number of one of the parents whose son got admission at a huge discount.

    When contacted, the man admitted that instead of Rs 60K he paid only Rs 35K for one year course for his 11th-grade son. He, however, said that Rs 35K is also a huge amount for him. “Exceptions are always there, I was given relaxation after the intervention of one of my friend’s friend, but the majority of the students pay Rs 60K,” he added.

    “In order to provide a level playing field, it has become inevitable for the government to regulate the fee mechanism of these coaching centres for whom education is secondary and business first. We request the government to stop these coaching centres from fleecing the parents and intervene without any delay,” said parents. [KNT]

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    #Poor #Students #Afford #Admissions #Srinagars #BusinessOriented #Coaching #Centres

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • ‘I wanted to make a bag that I could afford’: designer Raul Lopez on affordable it bags – and a diverse look finally coming to New York fashion

    ‘I wanted to make a bag that I could afford’: designer Raul Lopez on affordable it bags – and a diverse look finally coming to New York fashion

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    On a mild evening in early spring, an unassuming street in Brooklyn momentarily became the destination for New York’s fashion crowd. Club kids, streetwear aficionados and people dressed like Neo from The Matrix vied for a spot in the swelling crowd. The reason? A fashion label called Luar, which has become so hyped in recent years that even those not usually accustomed to queueing will gladly get in line.

    It was worth it. Once inside, the show felt like a party, with Tony award-nominated playwright Jeremy O.Harris and rapper A$AP Ferg in attendance, cheers coming from the usually po-faced audience with each model, and classy and clever takes on evening wear and suitable for work suiting on the catwalk. It then – seamlessly – turned into an actual party, the kind with drinks on trays.

    Luar’s designer, Raul Lopez, speaking a few weeks after the show, is wide-eyed but smiling when told about the scrum to get in. “It’s become a thing where it’s like getting into a club,” he says, speaking to the Guardian via video call from his grandmother’s house. “The kids start to leak it on TikTok or whatever … and like 700 or 800 people show up.”

    Those numbers are testament to how Luar is a name known way beyond those in the rarified world of fashion. This is perhaps partly because Lopez – a queer designer of colour who grew up in a non-gentrified area of New York – stands out from the industry he operates in. Rather than obscure these differences, Luar leans into them and celebrates them – constructing something radical: a luxury label that has appeal beyond the 1%.

    A model walks the runway at the Luar fashion show during New York Fashion Week in February 2023.
    A model walks the runway at the Luar fashion show during New York Fashion Week in February 2023. Photograph: Hippolyte Petit/FilmMagic

    If, in the fashion world, New York has long been shorthand for the uptown polish of labels such as Michael Kors and Ralph Lauren, Lopez’s Luar is one of a number of labels finally showing different points of view in this most diverse of cities. Other names include Willy Chavarria, the 56-year-old designer who works for Calvin Klein and is enjoying something of a resurgence of interest, thanks to his genderless designs and diverse street casting. And Head of State, the label founded by Taofeek Abijako when he was 17. His collection in February was a moving tribute to his father’s journey from Nigeria to Spain and finally the US.

    Notably, Lopez closed fashion week – a prestigious slot usually reserved for a household name. He sees this as an affirmation. “I was born and raised in New York, [and] coming from these disturbed neighbourhoods … to be able to display my work for the world and for New York, it was an honour,” he says. “In a weird way, it wasn’t really about me, it was about everybody. It’s like ‘I can do this, you can do this too, you know, you just got to hustle.’”

    There are other signs of success. He is one of nine finalists up for this year’s prestigious LVMH prize for young designers, with the winner announced in June. He was also awarded the CDFA accessories designer of the year in 2022. And sales are growing – with the Ana bag key to this meteoric rise. The first drop, in October 2021, sold out within 30 minutes, and according to Vogue Business, sales for the brand increased 140% from spring/summer 2022 to spring/summer 2023.

    Launched in 2021, the classic square shape with a looped round handle has become a favourite of celebrities including Dua Lipa, Troye Sivan and (delightfully) Patti LaBelle, but also regular folk. This is partly because of its price tag – the largest is $395 (£315). That might sound expensive – and it is – but compare that to other catwalk brands and it becomes relatively affordable in the world of luxury; a Louis Vuitton Speedy will set you back £1,310, for example, while a Chanel 2.55 is £8,530.

    A model holds the Ana bag from Luar. It is a classic square shaped bag with a looped round handle.
    The Ana bag from Luar. Photograph: Luca Khouri/PR Image

    Lopez says this was intentional – it’s the kind of purchase someone can feasibly save up for (and they do – all but one of the designs are sold out online, and there are enthusiastic unboxing videos on TikTok). “I wanted to make a bag that I could afford when I was coming up,” he says. He says he sees people carrying the bag regularly. “I could be in one of those posh restaurants in London and then go to Brixton and a girl has that on there, too,” he says. “And it’s the same thing in Japan. I get pictures all the time. It’s pretty iconic. She [Ana] has a world of her own.”

    He elaborates on how the design is a tribute to his family, who immigrated from the Dominican Republic in the mid-80s. “The handle was a homage to my grandmother and a nod to the Mod era,” explains Lopez. “And the shape was a nod to my mom. It’s like a briefcase … when immigrants came here, what they thought American luxury was, it was to have a briefcase. It’s a stamp of approval that you’re doing [well] even though you’re dirt poor. My dad had a briefcase in the house, and my mom had the small briefcase.” Is it a symbol of success? “100%. That’s what they were using it for, it was to fit into that world.”

    The son of a construction worker and a factory seamstress, Lopez’s family and upbringing in the Dominican community are central to his designs, but also his lifestyle. He grew up in Williamsburg, long before the area was gentrified to the point of parody, and still lives in the same building in which he spent his childhood (although his parents have since moved to Long Island).

    His mother and aunts showed him the power of clothes. “They were trying to emulate the American luxury they were seeing and to copy, paste – like a Latina Elizabeth Taylor or something,” he says. “But [they were] living in this dump. And to me, it was so beautiful. They were putting on these clothes to walk around these crack-infested neighbourhoods.”

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    The Ana bag from Luar is a classic square shaped bag with a looped round handle.
    The Ana bag from Luar. Photograph: Luca Khouri/PR Image

    If Lopez’s relatives are one type of family that he draws on, there’s also his community of other young queer men of colour, who came up together in New York in the early 00s. The models in his shows are often women Lopez knows from the ballroom scene, the diverse LGBTQ+ subculture as captured in Pose and Paris Is Burning. This is also where he met Telfar Clemens, the man behind the label Telfar, who Lopez calls his “best friend”. The two are often compared – partly because Telfar’s bag is also another so-called accessible status accessory, with the biggest of his shopping totes selling for £211 (it has been dubbed the “Brooklyn Birkin”). Lopez has a note of impatience when asked about the comparison. “It’s like, why are they comparing us? Do they compare a Prada bag to a Fendi bag?”

    Any narrative that they are competitors rather than friends is far from the case. “[Clemens] was always like ‘you need to do accessory’, he pushed and pushed,” says Lopez. “When I did my first drop [of the Ana] … he came and picked me up, popping bottles of champagne. We went to dinner to celebrate. They can’t break our bond.” Lopez says Clemens buys the Ana as presents for his relatives, rather than giving them his own bags.

    Lopez is already fairly established in the fashion industry, beginning the label Hood By Air (HBA) with fellow designer Shayne Oliver (who he also met on the ballroom scene) in 2005, when Lopez was 17. If New York fashion at the time was pretty frilly dresses or work-ready shifts, Oliver and Lopez brought club culture, men in skirts and oversized logos to the catwalk long before other designers explored these themes. “We changed the game,” says Lopez now. “It took me a long time to be able to say that. I never gave myself my flowers.”

    Pop star Dua Lipa is photographed in New York City in September 2022. She is wearing black leggings and a white shirt and carrying a green and yellow snake printed Ana bag from Luar.
    Pop star Dua Lipa in New York City in September 2022 carrying an Ana bag from Luar. Photograph: Robert Kamau/GC Images

    Lopez left HBA (without any conflict, he says) in 2010 and worked on various projects until Luar Zepol – a semordnilap of his name, later shortened to Luar – first began in 2017. But, after 12 years on the hamster wheel of fashion, the designer was reaching breaking point. “I was depressed and tired and exhausted, my mental health was all over the place,” he says. “Right after my show in 2019 I stopped completely and I disappeared into the Cayman Islands [he worked as a consultant to a hotel] and hid out down there for a year and a half.”

    He says this retreat came from a realisation. “I never took a break since I left HBA. It was always go, go, go, go, go because even when I was stopping, I was still doing consulting. I was still working, trying to make money. It took a toll on me,” he says. “I’m always [the one] saying ‘oh, depression, anxiety. That’s crap, just snap out of it’. I didn’t know that I was actually depressed and had anxiety and my mental health was going through the sky.”

    While he was concerned time out from the industry would mean fashion would move on, it actually proved to be the galvanising moment. “When I came back in 2021 I already had a business plan,” he says. “I figured out how to make my brand successful – not just make clothing to please my friends, the art world and the fashion girls.” As his Instagram bio semi-jokes, philanthropy is next. “I’m just trying to figure out a way I can give back to the people who helped me and who inspire me,” he says “Like trans housing organisations, immigrants. I would like to do different colourways [of the Ana] and the money would just go to organisations. I’m not rich but I don’t care. I’ve lived a life of privilege and I still do. I don’t care about the money.”

    The Ana, meanwhile, has her own story. “Seeing my bag all around the world is beautiful,” he says. “I walked into a hotel and saw this woman and her mad crocodile Birkin and then she has my bag across her body. You go to Bushwick [a Brooklyn neighbourhood] and you see it [too]. That’s the world of Luar.”

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    #wanted #bag #afford #designer #Raul #Lopez #affordable #bags #diverse #finally #coming #York #fashion
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Unable to afford a wedding photographer, man uses hotel’s CCTV footage to create his wedding album

    Unable to afford a wedding photographer, man uses hotel’s CCTV footage to create his wedding album

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    Allocating your wedding budget can be one of the hardest tasks when planning your big day. With so many elements to consider, it is easy to lose track and mount up if not accounted for initially. With the advent of social media, especially Instagram, the cost of wedding photography has risen exorbitantly and in some weddings, the cost of wedding photography takes the maximum share.

     

    In Indore, a groom got so fed up with the high quotes even from the local wedding photographers that he devised a new way to create his wedding album. Reportedly, the man took all the CCTV footage of the wedding venue, hotel, and edited the footages himself to create his wedding album.

     

    The photos and videos in album were black and white, to which the groom said that “monochrome” was the theme of his wedding.

     

    Speaking to The Fauxy, one of the groom’s friends said “Alok (Groom) was worried about the wedding photography and the bride was more excited about the wedding album than the wedding itself. And after seeing the quotes by the local photographers he decided not to go ahead with them. Soon he claimed that his engagement ring is stolen and used it as an excuse to get all the CCTV footages of the hotel during wedding time. Even during his wedding he was learning photo and video editing. He took out time during honeymoon and created his wedding album“.

     

    Bride, who was very happy with the wedding album and its theme monochrome, has now deleted her Instagram account out of embarrassment.

     

     

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    #Unable #afford #wedding #photographer #man #hotels #CCTV #footage #create #wedding #album

    [ Disclaimer: With inputs from The Fauxy, an entertainment portal. The content is purely for entertainment purpose and readers are advised not to confuse the articles as genuine and true, these Articles are Fictitious meant only for entertainment purposes. ]

  • Indians can now afford 5G smartphones at just Rs 44 a day: Samsung India

    Indians can now afford 5G smartphones at just Rs 44 a day: Samsung India

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    New Delhi: Samsung India on Tuesday said it now has more than 62 million Galaxy A series smartphone customers in India and people can now enjoy a true 5G experience at just Rs 44 a day, or Rs 1,320 a month, via attractive EMI options, as the country-wide 5G roll out gains momentum in 2023.

    Aditya Babbar, Samsung India’s Senior Director of Mobile Business, told IANS that the early launch of new 5G smartphones is part of the company’s 5G-first strategy and will help the South Korean company secure 75 per cent of its smartphone business through 5G devices this year.

    “We’ve come up with multiple affordability options for our consumers, including extremely low EMIs, starting as low as Rs 44 per day for newly-launched Galaxy A14 5G,” Babbar said.

    Last year, Galaxy A series was India’s best-selling smartphone series.

    “In fact, the Galaxy A is industry’s fastest-growth smartphone series (above 10 million units). We believe the launch of Galaxy A14 5G and A23 5G will help us start the year on a strong note,” Babbar added.

    Samsung’s new Galaxy A series smartphones are made for the 5G era and come with a large 6.6-inch screen and a 5000mAh battery for seamless entertainment.

    Samsung is betting big on its recently launched 5G smartphones – Galaxy A14 5G and A23 5G – to consolidate its 5G leadership in the country.

    Galaxy A14 5G comes with Samsung’s new Galaxy signature design and is the company’s most affordable 5G smartphone in the A series portfolio in India, starting at an effective price of Rs 14,999.

    Galaxy A23 5G, which comes with a 50MP camera with OIS, starts at an effective price of Rs 20,999.

    According to Babbar, to democratise 5G technology in India, “we are not only reaching out to more customers by leveraging our distribution depth, but also providing more affordability options to customers”.

    “We have ensured that A14 5G and A23 5G are the most widely distributed 5G smartphones in the country. We are also ensuring equal EMIs for our 4G and 5G phones,” Babbar told IANS.

    Samsung said that 60 per cent of its customers use affordability platforms to buy smartphones, higher than the industry average of 40 per cent.

    Nearly 80 per cent of Samsung customers who buy smartphones on credit use Samsung Finance+ platform, which the company launched in 2019.

    Samsung led the India market in 5G smartphone shipments last year.

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    #Indians #afford #smartphones #day #Samsung #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )