Just when we think we are so over cultural appropriation, the West proves us wrong. Thereโs something both amusing and infuriating about the Westโs selective amnesia when it comes to culture. One day, itโs mockery and exoticism. Next, itโs rebranded minimalism, โavant-gardeโ fashion, or, in the most recent example, a Scandinavian shawl. Yes, a European fashion house tried to rebrand the South Asian dupatta as some sort of Nordic ancestral scarf. And no, they didnโt even say โinspired by.โ
Welcome to 2025, where your grandmotherโs dupatta is now โฌ300, beige, and apparently from Sweden.
The Dupatta: Apparently Now Scandinavian
To understand why this sparked such outrage, you need to understand what the dupatta represents. Itโs not just a piece of cloth. It drapes over the shoulders of village women in Sindh, floats behind brides in Mumbai and flows with fierce elegance at Lahore protests. Itโs been painted in Mughal miniatures, praised in poetry and passed down through generations. Now, apparently, itโs a โScandinavian shawl.โ
Imagine being gaslit into thinking that our ancestors’ culture was Scandinavian all along.
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The Rebranding Machine: A Tale as Old as Colonialism
This isnโt the first time this has happened, and we know that it wonโt be the last. From yoga to turmeric lattes, kohl to bindis, the West has an enduring habit of picking up โethnicโ or โthird worldโ elements and then scrubbing them from their cultural roots. What do they do next? Sell them back to us with a shiny new label and a four-figure price tag.
What makes the Scandinavian shawl stunt so BIG? It’s the fact that it is being painted as a new discovery; a โrevivalโ of some ancient European tradition all while completely ignoring the millennia of textile and fashion heritage from South Asia.
Weโre talking about a region that was exporting silk, cotton and dyes when most of Europe was still figuring out how not to wear itchy animal hides. Our weaving techniques were so advanced that colonisers literally dismantled local industries to prevent competition. But today, a white model in a beige scarf gets hailed as a visionary?
Bipty, Oh Polly & Reformationโs Repeat Offenses
Unfortunately, this isnโt an isolated incident. Western brands have made an entire sport out of cultural theft.
Last May, an employee at Bipty, a fashion community, posted a now-deleted video on TikTok, flitting through Pinterest images of white women in floor-to-mid-length floral dresses and semi-sheer scarves draped across their chests. In some photos, pants completed the look. โThe vibe, the aura, what is it?โ said the employee. โItโs very European, itโs very classy.โ Within hours, confusion, frustration, and laughter from South Asians flooded the comments and โFor Youโ pages. โThe vibe is Desi, the aura is South Asian โ the shawl, thatโs a dupatta, thatโs a chunni,โ clapped back Meghana, an Indian-American TikToker.

Just earlier this month, fashion brand Reformation released a collection with a three-piece outfit (with a skirt, top, and scarf) that eerily resembled a lehenga. Not to be outdone, Oh Polly released a pink outfit that, as fit folks say, looked like a Sharara. The brand posted a TikTok of its new โGalia convertible gownโ (a baby pink bejewelled bodice with matching pleated wide-leg trousers).
When backlash ensued, Oh Polly appeared to acknowledge the misstep by replying to some comments that the brand would โ be more mindful in ensuring that cultural elements are honoured with respect in our designs moving forwardโ. But fast forward two weeks and the campaign and the TikToks are still going strong.

Whatโs in a Name?
Now, defenders of the fashion house (and there are always defenders) argue that โshawlโ is a generic term, and many cultures have similar garments.
Some have been questioning the criticism these brands are facing. โIโm sorry โ we complain when Western fashion isnโt inclusive and then complain when it diversifies? What?โ one person on TikTok wrote. Several comments like this and others who think we should โshareโ instead of gatekeep our culture have been left under TikToks discussing the appropriation of South Asian clothing.
Fair point. But letโs not pretend context doesnโt matter. The issue lies in the fact that there is an existing power imbalance between South Asian and Western cultures. With hundreds of years of colonisation that have continued to impact South Asians and their connection to culture, it is deeply upsetting to have all the things that were deemed less than or uncivilised suddenly be trending fashion pieces now.
When we wear it, itโs too ethnic, too modest, too foreign. When they wear it, itโs elevated, chic and minimalist. Itโs the same cloth. But one gets searched at the airport, and the other walks the Paris runway.

This Isnโt Inspiration. Itโs Erasure.
Letโs get one thing straight: cultural exchange is beautiful. South Asians arenโt gatekeeping a strip of cloth. What weโre tired of is erasure. Of white models in dupattas being called โvisionary,โ while brown girls in the same outfit are seen as โtoo ethnicโ or โnot integrating.โ
This is a wake-up call for South Asians, too. We’ve allowed ourselves to laugh off cultural appropriation for too long. We giggle when someone wears jhumkas at Coachella or a lehenga to a โBollywood-themed bachelorette.โ But the more we normalise it, the more our heritage becomes something others can co-opt without credit.
So the next time you see a โScandinavian shawlโ making waves, just smile โ and say, โNice dupatta, babe.โ
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