Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Designer Basks In Glow Of 'kate Effect' After Royal Wears Canadian Coat

The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2016 01:24 PM
    TORONTO — Bojana Sentaler is quickly learning just what it means to feel the full force of the "Kate effect."
     
    Barely 24 hours after the Duchess of Cambridge appeared in a coat by the Toronto-based fashion designer, the grey alpaca garment and many others from the Sentaler brand sold out online, with orders coming in from around the world.
     
    "It was incredible," said the 31-year-old Sentaler, whose eponymous brand features luxury outerwear. "The Kate effect, for my brand, was an instant brand awareness around the entire world."
     
    Kate and Prince William, along with their two young children, are currently on a week-long visit to British Columbia and Yukon. The outfits worn by the duchess have been closely tracked by royal watchers and fashion enthusiasts.
     
    Speculation has swirled over whether she would opt for any homegrown designs. It happened Wednesday in Carcross, Yukon, when Kate appeared in the Sentaler wrap coat, giving the Canadian brand — which launched in 2009 — an immediate boost.
     
    "At first I thought it was a joke and then I went on Twitter and I saw the picture," said Sentaler, who first learned of her coat being worn when someone tagged her brand on social media. "I feel extremely blessed and honoured that she chose to wear my coat during her Canadian tour."
     
    While seeing Kate in the coat was a surprise, Sentaler had been quietly hoping the royal might showcase one of her designs. 
     
    Her brand had been contacted by someone she later believed was the stylist for the duchess, although there was never any official indication one of her coats was being purchased for Kate.
     
     
     
    "We got an email asking 'do you ship to the U.K.' so we thought it was a customer and we said yes, of course ... there was nothing that gave away that it was for Kate or anyone in the Buckingham Palace," Sentaler explained. "It was only after we kind of put two and two together, we looked up her name on the Internet and realized it was Kate Middleton's stylist."
     
    With her brand now being mentioned in global reports about the fashion choices of the duchess, Sentaler hopes the recognition that comes with the Kate effect will help her brand as it tries to expand in international markets.
     
    "A lot of retailers that we will be wanting to talk to will now know the brand, we won't have to introduce it," she said. "Also, customers are more likely to buy now because they know the brand."
     
    Sentaler isn't the only Canadian brand benefiting from the royal touch.
     
    Shelley Macdonald, a jewellery designer living in Whitehorse, says earrings she designed were worn by Kate in Yukon, leading to a "significant amount" of orders.
     
    For a Canadian brand in particular, being chosen by Kate is a boon in a wildly competitive international market, said Sentaler.
     
    "It's very hard to be recognized or even be noticed amongst all the other amazing brands that are out there," she said. "When something like this happens... it just speeds everything up. So rather than waiting a couple of years for everybody to find out about your brand, everybody can find out about your brand just by the duchess herself wearing my coat."
     
    Canadian style expert Jeanne Beker agreed.
     
    "Our designers don't have those international marketing budgets that their American and European counterparts have for the most part," she explained. "Any time you can get an international figure of that profile and magnitude and calibre strutting something Canadian, the whole industry I think is just buoyed."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Punjabi Is Now The Third Language In Parliament Of Canada

    Punjabi Is Now The Third Language In Parliament Of Canada
    According to Statistics Canada’s 2011 National Household Survey, 430,705 Canadians identified Punjabi as their mother tongue, making it the third most common language after English and French

    Punjabi Is Now The Third Language In Parliament Of Canada

    Thieves Use Chainsaws To Down Power Poles In Surrey And Strip Copper: BC Hydro

    Thieves Use Chainsaws To Down Power Poles In Surrey And Strip Copper: BC Hydro
    Hydro said the two poles were located on separate properties and their transformers were stripped of copper.

    Thieves Use Chainsaws To Down Power Poles In Surrey And Strip Copper: BC Hydro

    B.C. Campaign Against Overdose Deaths Ramps Up On Overdose Awareness Day

    British Columbia's joint task force examining the drug overdose crisis says International Overdose Awareness Day has never been more relevant.

    B.C. Campaign Against Overdose Deaths Ramps Up On Overdose Awareness Day

    CBC to stop playing ads on Radio 2 and ICI Musique after CRTC decision

    CBC to stop playing ads on Radio 2 and ICI Musique after CRTC decision
    TORONTO — The CBC will not be permitted to play paid advertisements on two of its radio networks as of Thursday.

    CBC to stop playing ads on Radio 2 and ICI Musique after CRTC decision

    Canadian And His Wife, Hostages In Afghanistan, Plead For Lives In Video

    Canadian And His Wife, Hostages In Afghanistan, Plead For Lives In Video
    In the video, Joshua Boyle and Caitlan Coleman sombrely warn they will be killed by their captors unless Kabul abandons its policy of executing captured prisoners.

    Canadian And His Wife, Hostages In Afghanistan, Plead For Lives In Video

    Police Shouldn't Use Public Shaming, Critics Say After Prostitution Sting

    Experts in privacy and civil rights are raising questions about a police news conference that identified 27 men caught in a Cape Breton prostitution sting, saying the move amounted to unnecessary "public shaming."

    Police Shouldn't Use Public Shaming, Critics Say After Prostitution Sting