Zimbabwe News

Priscins Petals sets the pace in Zimbabwe fashion industry

Award winning fashion brand Priscins Petals and Priscins Shoes have become the top and most popular fashion house in Harare.

Prisicins Petals and Priscins Shoes have dominated the market with their exclusive and high quality elegant designs that have become the talk and envy of the town. The trendy fashion house opened a new outlet at the busy Fife Avenue mall in the city of Harare.

The company has set the pace and standard in shop aesthetics, quality of products and design elegance. A number of upcoming and established fashion houses are now imitating Priscins Petals and Priscins Shoes. Other competitors have gone to the point of trying to secure back door deals with the company’s suppliers so that they can have the same merchandise as Priscins Petals.

Meghan Matthews a Harare based fashion consultant who graduated in fashion from Chinhoyi University said, “Priscins Petals merchandise is unique and elegant, their choice of fabric and design is simply astonishing and it does not surprise us that fashion houses are now trying to copy Prisicins Petals and others trying to do under handed deals with the supplier so that they can get the same quality.”

Legal expert Thembani Mpofu warned that while competition is good, plagiarism is definitely a bad idea as some of these ideas are protected by the copyright act as well as legal contracts. Those trying to copy Priscins Petals should be guided by the law as the brand will not hesitate to Institute legal proceedings against anyone who violates the brand’s intellectual property.

Source: Bulawayo24

In other news-CCC Leader heading for polls without reforms

ZIMBABWE could be heading for elections without electoral reforms if President Emmerson Mnangagwa proclaims the poll date before finalisation of the Electoral Amendment Bill which is before Parliament, experts told the NewsDay yesterday.

CCC

Mnangagwa is expected to announce the date for the polls today.

However, according to constitutional experts, the Electoral Amendment Bill must become law before the proclamation is gazetted for its provision to be in effect in the upcoming elections.

The Bill, which seeks among other things, to disqualify electoral candidates with criminal records, sailed through its second reading in the National Assembly recently, but Parliament went into recession until May 30. Learn more

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