Adka Festival culminates in a night of fashion - Action News
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Adka Festival culminates in a night of fashion

The D Ze Tsn (From Our Hearts) fashion show highlighted Indigenous artists, and brought the cultural festival in Whitehorse to an exciting close.

D Ze Tsn (From Our Hearts) fashion show highlights Indigenous artists

A dress by designer D'Arcy Moses of the Pehdzeh Ki First Nation, modelled by Claire Anderson. (CBC/Stephanie Wood)

The room was buzzing before theThe D Ze Tsn (From Our Hearts) began.

Both the designers and the attendees were feeling the excitement.

The Thursday night event brought Whitehorse's AdkaCultural Festival to a close for another year, with a colourful show highlighting Indigenous artists and designers.

Sami models Inga-Wiktoria Pave and Fredrik Prost wearing traditional regalia. The Sami people inhabit Finland, Norway, Sweden and part of Russia. (Stephanie Wood/CBC)

Joleen Mitton,a Cree designer whofoundedVancouver Indigenous Fashion Week, raved about the event.

"I'm just really excited to be meeting new designers," said Mitton. "Doing Vancouver Indigenous Fashion week, having to find new talent is something that I'm looking for and Adka definitely has it."

The show was Josh Carr's first time being amodel. He modelled fourdifferentoutfits.

On the left, Josh Carr wears a vest his mother made for his high school graduation. His mother, Shozr Melanie Bennett, is a Trondk Hwchin artist and designer. On the right, Carr wears a design by D'Arcy Moses. (Stephanie Wood/CBC)

"I can definitely say that my favourite was my mom's," he said. "It's avest she made for me when I graduated high school."

There were 40 models and over 400 guestsat theshow.

The models wore both contemporary and traditional pieces.

Tianna Reti wearing a green sequin dress with a killer whale design by Autumn Jules. Jules is a citizen of the Teslin Tlingit Council. (Stephanie Wood/CBC)

ShoSho Esquiro's work blends the old and the new. Sheis an artist and fashion designer from Yukon'sRoss River KaskaDenaNation.

She displayed her collection "No Apology Necessary," which she said isaresponse to Pope Francis' refusal to apologize for residential schools.

The collection featureda jacket with a photo of the Pope on the back, stitched on upside down.

"'No Apology Necessary' is a direct message to Pope Francis," she said. "I don't feel us, as First Nations people, need to be waiting around for that. I don't feel that our healing is dependant on it."

Shae-Lynn Boyko modelling a jacket from Sho Sho Esquiro's collection, No Apology Necessary. Esquiro is a Kaska-Dena designer from Ross River, YT. (Stephanie Wood/CBC)

Esquiro said she had worriedwhat her father, a residential school survivor,would think about the message. But she said he has been very supportive.

Esquiro said her work became more political as she gained confidencein her art.

"A lot of people think fashion is kind of 'come or go,' or don't take it seriously. I've worked very hard for my fashion to be looked at as art," she said.

Esquiro will be putting on another fashion show at the AtlinArts and Music Festival this weekend.