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Fashion Trust Arabia Names Prize Winners in Qatar

Designers from Morocco, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain were among those to receive a financial grant of between $100,000 and $200,000 at the Doha ceremony.
Awards Ceremony Showcase
Fashion Trust Arabia co-founders Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad Al Thani and Tania Fares, join co-host Queen Latifah on stage with the winners, finalists and jury members of this year's prize at an awards ceremony at the National Museum of Qatar in Doha on November 22, 2025. (Darren Gerrish)

The Fashion Trust Arabia, a non-profit fund supporting emerging design talent from the Middle East and North Africa, returned to Doha, Qatar for its seventh edition on Saturday. Six of the region’s up-and-coming designers, and one guest country winner, were awarded cash prizes and mentorships at the annual awards ceremony.

Moroccan designer Youssef Drisi took the ready-to-wear prize for his brand Late for Work, with Saudi-based Ziyad Albuainain winning the evening wear category. Meanwhile Morocco’s Leila Roukni was recognised for her label Talel in accessories; and Paris-based Egyptian Farah Radwan received the jewellery prize for her brand Fyr.

The winning designers in these top four categories will each receive a financial award of between $100,000 and $200,000 based, in part, on the size of their businesses. They will also have their collections carried by Harrods and Ounass for a season, and receive a year-long mentorship with Value Retail’s Bicester Collection.

This year’s other winners included Bahrain-born, Switzerland-raised designer Alaa Alaradi, who won in the Franca Sozzani Debut Talent award, and will receive a grant of $50,000, and Bahraini sisters Dalal and Fatema Alkhaja who won the Fashion Tech Award for their brand Touchless.

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Indian designer Kartik Kumra, founder of Kartik Research, was presented with this year’s guest country award, in partnership with the Nita Mukesh Ambani Cultural Centre.

The winners were selected by a judging panel that included designers Christian Louboutin, Stefano Pilati, Giambattista Valli, Schiaparelli’s Daniel Roseberry, Natalia Vodianova, Gisele Bündchen as well as BoF’s Imran Amed, accessories designer Amina Muaddi and Lebanese couturier Zuhair Murad, who also won the trailblazer award.

Miuccia Prada won the lifetime achievement award at this year’s ceremony. “I’m very happy to take this award mainly because it’s a symbol of cultural exchange and collaboration, and that’s very important,” said Prada upon accepting the honour.

In addition to presiding over the awards, FTA co-founder Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad Al Thani also co-hosted the inaugural Franca Fund Gala on Sunday to raise funds for preventative genomics. The event was held at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha in honour of the late Franca Sozzani, former Vogue Italia editor, with Anna Wintour and Sozzani’s son, Francesco Carrozzini in attendance.

Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani
Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani at the inaugural Franca Fund Gala on November 23, 2025. (Alexander Fischer/BFA.com)

“Culture has always been important,” Al Thani told BoF, explaining the ramp up in Qatar’s links to fashion in recent years. “When my father came to power, he wanted to revolutionise what culture meant, what art was…and invest in people through arts education, cultural institutions, museums — and you cannot really separate fashion from the art world.”

Landing the point, Al Thani cited London-based designer Erdem Moralioglu, whose namesake label will be the focus of an exhibition in Doha next year, as well as her own experiences. “We’re doing an exhibition here as Erdem is celebrating 20 years of his brand… He’s so inspired by art, and always shows his collections at the British Museum. [For my part] I entered fashion through the art world; it’s very much connected, it’s two sides of the same coin.”

Al Thani noted the “fundamental” role that fashion exhibitions play in Qatar’s museum programmes. “Not as a statement of glamour but as incubators for talent, craftsmanship and ancestral learning.”

This year, the FTA launched ‘Threads of Impact’, an exhibition curated by Lagos Fashion Week founder Omoyemi Akerele, at Doha’s M7 arts hub, showcasing the work of more than 80 past FTA award winners, finalists or collaborators.

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The ultimate goal for initiatives like Fashion Trust Arabia, Al Thani said, is about “human development: investing in people, empowering them with the sophistication of culture, of arts education... It’s not just about being a consumer and having money to buy things.”

The FTA was founded in 2018 by Qatar’s Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, mother of the Emir of Qatar and Sheikha Al Mayassa, and Lebanon-born Tania Fares who serves as co-chair. “Designers from the MENA region are inventive, daring, creative and visionary,” said Fares. The FTA exists “to give them visibility and support to travel globally.”

“The MENA region has gone through one of its hardest chapters in decades. So many of our countries, our people and our creatives have been tested in ways words can’t describe, and yet what continues to move me is the strength of our community, the way our designers keep creating, keep telling our stories and keep reminding the world of who we are,” Fares added.

The Qataris have bet big on the luxury fashion sector, making multiple investments in global brands and retailers from Valentino to Printemps through various vehicles. These and other investments sit alongside the FTA as a part of Qatar’s broader ambition to become a regional cultural hub, an increasingly important strand of the country’s plans to diversify its economy away from oil and gas.

Additional reporting by Vikram Alexei Kansara.

Learn more:

Examining Qatar’s Fashion Hub Ambitions

Doha has attracted major fashion retail investment ahead of this month’s FIFA World Cup but the Qatari capital’s ability to attract overseas shoppers long-term remains uncertain.

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