Calgary fashion entrepreneurs team up with Syrian refugees to design dream business - Action News
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Calgary fashion entrepreneurs team up with Syrian refugees to design dream business

Husband-and-wife team Thierry Kouembi and Marlyse Tchuigoua know what its like to be newcomers to Canada.

Kems Fashion has gone from a room in a house to a factory in just a few years

The owners of Kems Fashion, Marlyse Tchuigoua and Thierry Kouembi, say Syrian newcomers bring the skills they need to make high-quality garments and grow their business. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

Husband and wife team ThierryKouembi andMarlyseTchuigouaknow what it's like to be newcomers to Canada.

They arrived in Calgary in 2015from Italy with big dreams to bring Milan-quality fashion design and manufacturing to Alberta.

Tchuigouaspent seven years as a pattern designer with theworld-famous brandDolce & Gabbana, following stints with other big names in Italy over 12 years after the couplemoved therefrom Cameroon.

"We decided it would be nice to come here and have our own manufacturing business," said Kouembi, who has also spent his lifearound clothes and fashion, working in fabric manufacturing himself as a student and being the son of aseamstress.

The couple started small, working out ofa room in their Calgaryhome, taking on all kinds of alterations and custom sewing jobsbefore deciding to take their dream to the next level. They did sowith help from organizations like the Francophone Economic Development Council for Alberta and FuturpreneurCanada, a non-profit that provides financing and mentoring for entrepreneurs.

Kems will move from this small upstairs workshop to a much bigger facility with cutting capability, more manufacturing space and room to grow. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"We did a small business plan, and after a collaboration with Futurpreneur, we got a loan of $25,000," said Kouembi.

From that, Kem's Fashion named after the couple's son, Kemiwas born.It offered pattern making and custom fashionfor businesses and local designers, providing cutting,sewing and finishing work from a small upstairs room in a northeast business unit.

The loan helped buy modernprofessionalsewing machines and other equipment.

The couple got to work,even putting together their own collectionto show at the 2017 Alberta Fashion Week in Edmonton.

The company now does work for local designers and companieslike Finn &Grin, Sem, Paige1912,Anthology 35 andVia and Jax, making women's andchildren's clothing, scarves, underwearand other products, including corporate wear and even pet products.

Behind the sewing machines sits a team of four Syrian refugeeswith the mastery of skills essential to a quality-conscious business like Kem's.

Thierry Kouembi says coming to Calgary at the same time as many Syrians made for the perfect match. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"We have been really fortunate to have a Syrian population here who recently came to Calgary," said Kouembi.

"We decided to talk to different agencies and social services to see if it was possible to have some people work, and the Syrians were really perfect on their jobs," he said.

Even his experienced andhyper-critical wifewas blown away by the Syrians' skills and quality of work.

"They start at age eightand now they are 30 or 32 and they are professional. They like their job and they need these jobs for their families because all of them have children and wives," said Tchuigoua.

"I hope we have a big market in order to give them a good contract and contribute to the Calgary and Alberta economies," she said.

Right now, the employees work part-time, but the couple hopes to landenough work soonto increase theirhours to full-time positions.

"They have experience in this field and it's important to allow them to have a really fair wage for what they are doing. They started doing it in their childhood, and we think with them we are able to do something great because of their expertise in this field," said Kouembi.

The business is doing so well they are just about to move nearby to a much bigger space in the industrial northeast, complete with their own cutting machine and places to store fabric and other equipment.

"I'm very, very excited because it's not easy and I have to face many challenges, like English language, and I'm very, very busy," said Tchuigoua, who is also a mother to three children, ages six, four and one.

If the province continues to support made-in-Canada, local business and sustainable products, Kouembisays his business and the fashion industry in Calgary will be able to grow into something special.

"It supports creativity, local fashion designersand entrepreneurs," said Kouembi.

MLA Karen McPherson says she'll be including the story of Kem's Fashioninto a bill she's working on.

Kems Fashion has gone from strength to strength in just a few years and will be included as an example in a new bill by MLA Karen McPherson regarding the economy and employment. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"The downturn has affected a lot of people. So to hear about an employer like this who's really specific about getting people who have the right skill sets and making sure there are jobs for people that might be struggling to find jobs otherwise, is really heartening," said McPherson, the MLA for Calgary-Mackay-Nose Hill.

"It was great they saw the potential in the city, and they're really committed to employing refugees and how could you not feel good about that?" said McPherson,

"They're looking at bringing interns in from different schools," she added. "It's a positive for other businesses in the city and in the province."

Kem's Fashionwill spend the summer moving into its new building.

The couple says they hope to employ another two Syrians this year, bringing their team up to eightworkers.