Sabtu, 30 November 2019

Inside the Fashion Cycle - lareviewofbooks

I AM NOT SUPPOSED to say this, because a feminist cultural critic can’t sound like a bored fashionista even for a second, but I got tired of leggings. More to the point, so did the industry. All fashions are made to wane. This once-popular nether garment now gets its inevitable toss into the dustbin of fashion history, becoming merely utilitarian rather than stylish. And, once again, I get to observe a cultural moment that is stranger than it appears: the end of one major fashion cycle and the beginning of another. For me, the entire fashion cycle has meanings that vibrate in our unconscious. This moment of symbolic transition can be dangerous to your sense of self-worth as you grow older.

Relying on the history of trends that change women’s looks by driving to the opposite pole, after tight I have been expecting loose. I wanted graceful, well-made, wide-leg pants. I was right. In London two summers ago, on Regent Street, I found the seasonal version. Dark navy cotton, with pockets (finally!), cool, airy, and short enough to show an ankle. Almost everybody, tall or short, wide or skinny, walking or chair-bound, has an ankle for display. Baggy jeans and balloon-leg jeans are also coming back in, my 13-year-old granddaughter tells me. These are styles that almost all females can embrace — they are not meant only for children, yogini, dancers, the hyper-confident (skinny, curvy, young), or wealthy celebrities. I’d almost call them equal-opportunity pants, except the fashion police will say that the top has to be tight-fitting.

As it happens, I own a few wide, beautifully tailored, lined, heavy, menswear wool pants for winter, all with pockets, saved from the 1980s and 1990s. I was then, and am still, of an age and status to benefit from looking professional. This means no T-and-A show because, in the world of accomplishments, your female head is more than just another element atop a decorative body. I dashed into the high-end London store and bought the last pair. They were a little big at the waist, but I was in at the excitement of “the point of purchase” — and on Regent Street to boot! Look at me! My early adapter thrill is, of course, an intrinsic part of the whole fashion cycle.

The person “discovering” the next new style engages in a process that US commerce cannot do without. It may seem like a “unique,” “individual” experience to you as you click “Add to cart” or dive into the boutique, but new desire, consumption, new spending, new money for the industry is the whole point of major style changes. Going through the entire cycle is necessary for commerce to start the whole wily and disturbing process over again on your live body and innocent mind.

Under globalization, cheaper clothes have made it possible, and fear of unfashionability has made it necessary, for many girls and women to whirl through the cycle more often. Nowadays those in the prime targeted demographic — 16-to-34-year-olds, and to a lesser extent boys and young men of the same ages — are ripping through the cycle. When the so-called boomers were young, they were moving through the “slower shopping cycle” of the past. According to Julia Twigg, the English fashion critic, in a 2017 article in the European Journal of Cultural Studies, “women over 75 in the United Kingdom in the early 21st century shop as frequently for clothes as did those aged 16-34 in 1960s.” In my case (I was in that youthful cohort in the 1960s), that required very few garments. An American in the 21st century, over 75, I still buy very few. So, for some people (and class and gender as well as age figure here), the cycle goes much more slowly and deliberately — and this matters. It makes purchasing more cautious and makes each garment prized.

That said, the life cycle of any style, at any age, in any era, moves from purchase through consumption (public display of possession) to decline (going out of fashion), and finally to the discarding of an “old” fashion. This last phase is dangerous, as I shall show. Going through the cycle is structured into everyday life in such a way that all participants experience the same phases, in the same order, time after time. We — practically the entire population of the country, including men going through their own more durable cycles — participate (or, given poverty and deprivation, dream from afar of participating) in the fashion cycle.

This might not matter to any but the excluded, except that the cycle is also an emotional experience for the deliberating and acquiring subject. Desiring and purchasing constitute the “youth” phase, emotionally speaking. As I instantly felt on Regent Street, this phase involves “falling in love,” yearning, and spending money on the object of desire. Possession involves some affective relationship with an important garment over time: gazing in the mirror, getting approving glances, washing the item or taking it to the dry cleaner (and investing more time and money in it), admiring it in the drawer or on the hanger, choosing it in the morning. Girls and women dress for themselves and for other people in their lives — but also for the imaginary social gaze (the male gaze or the female gaze) that confirms their selfhood, including such aspects as their gender identity, their age identity, their attractiveness, their fashionability.

“On the Avenue, Fifth Avenue, the photographers will snap us / And you’ll find that you’re in the rotogravure.” Nowadays, depending upon your age and other categories, it’s the selfie gaze, the Pinterest or Instagram gaze, the Bill Cunningham–like eye on the street, or the spotter from O or Vogue. These habits of affective possession are not trivial, because they are incremental and cumulative investments in identity and selfhood. It’s a kind of narcissistic cathexis, to use Freudian terminology. Each time, the habit murmurs, iteratively, something like, “My pants are me.” Events happen while you are wearing the object, and they may reinforce your possessiveness, your pride in it, and, above all, the value of yourself in it. In London, despite my advanced age, I got a lot of envious, curious, and admiring glances from women in my new wide pants. I thought for an instant that Anna Wintour might notice me.

As fashion dictates go, tight has lasted a long time. It may get a longer shelf life from publicity regarding the Catholic mother who was protecting her five sons from barely covered girlish buttocks. Complaints about leggings looking slutty when worn with short or cropped tops (nobody objects if you wear a dress over them) got feminists and others engaged in angry arguments that the gender police are at work censoring what girls “want” to wear. This foolish debate could go on, each side digging in harder and missing the real point. Meanwhile, girls who wear leggings may feel pressured to go on doing so, whether they want to or not, just to appear resistant to pressure. But move on, both sides. Leggings won’t necessarily be thrown away, because they remain useful — in yoga and dance studios and under ski pants and long jackets — but as loose takes over, it will be less and less possible to wear them pridefully. The industry pulls the strings on the marionettes.

Count on the style magazines to now begin to emphasize the demerits of leggings and forget that they had the great advantage for consumers of being cheaper than jeans and serving like a uniform — easy to put on in the morning, without hesitation. My pleasure on Regent Street was real, however brief, but it didn’t make me a fool for fashion. At a major transition point, a cultural critic can observe the fault of any style that gets accepted by the fashion press — whether it’s bustles in the 19th century, or bustiers in the twenty-aughts. Almost every major fashion change disadvantages enormous numbers of women. Leggings in particular disadvantaged anyone who felt she couldn’t wear them because of our culture’s sizeism, ageism, or ableism, or her own sense of falling short of perfection. Sadly, as always, we’re talking about millions of women. So, as leggings lose prestige, the fat-acceptance movement may rejoice, and the anti-ageist and anti-ableist movements may permit themselves a sigh of relief.

The early adapters are the ones who natively have the right shape and the money to afford the new style. Many of the rest of us — the ones who feel sure they will not look good in the major fashion of the moment — are sooner or later enticed, or teased, or somehow manipulated into buying it. Not just ads, finally, but the force of peer pressure and trendiness bring many around willy-nilly to whatever the “exciting” new style is. The disadvantage critique of fashion — many will not look good in this— is visibly true only in the kind of retrospect I am conducting.

With major fashion looks, you can never predict exactly what will come next. But history taught me the safe bet: it would be the opposite of what has just been considered the height of chic. In World War II, when natural fabric was hard to come by, and people were still recovering from the Depression, skirts were pencil-narrow and made of rayon. Some women wore slacks. Then, in 1947, although Europe was barely starting to recover from the war, Dior, a Parisian couture house, rushed to bring in long, full A-line skirts, which used yards and yards of expensive natural fabrics from his friend’s mill. It was rich people’s clothing, and feminine rather than androgynous. Dior cleaned up. Human figures, of course, had to look as if the body itself had changed. The old wartime skimpy narrow jacket had had big shoulders. The New Look demanded a tiny waist and small shoulders. At age eight, in the third grade, having both, I begged my mother for a full skirt. Ignorant of baleful fashion cycles, I spun around in it with dervish joy. As for the girls and women built for the earlier style, who for a few wartime years had felt they looked sexy, thrifty, fashionable, and patriotic all at once — well, too bad. Just a few years later, in my teens, girls wearing that narrow skirt looked low class, slutty.

Of course, not everyone falls into all the baited traps. Some women threw away their girdles and bras and garter belts after 1968, and many never gave a second glance to the push-up-bra-and-corset combination called the bustier. Some women ignored stirrup pants, the precursor to leggings, in the 1980s. Some women have a particular look they developed and have worn comfortably without too many changes for decades. Resistance (a topic for another time) is possible.

The experience of going through the cycle is a core experience of consciousness, lifelong. It often starts before the teen years. Why did I beg my mother for the New Look? We were working class and struggling. How did I get so smart, at eight years of age, about Dior’s expensive gamble? Every fashion change you adopt requires new learning, conscious and unconscious. The conscious knowledge — brand names, preferred colors (the “pink Wednesday” of Mean Girls), the right length — will always soon become obsolete. Yet there are millions who master the details, and not just once and for all but, after a punctuated interval, other details, again, many times. Men, too. There are men my age who learned to reject wide lapels, pleated pants, tight-waisted jackets — all the looks they once admired on themselves and later discarded. People who can’t master school subjects easily become “knowledgeable,” “smart shoppers,” “educated consumers.” (Praise for market learning comes in the vocabulary of academic success.)

The end of a fashion cycle can become embarrassing to those who had once benefited from wearing it new. Once big pants are considered stylish, leggings will retrospectively come to seem wrong to girls and women even in the advantaged group — the thin, the leggy, those with shapely calves and right-sized thighs and the chutzpah to carry off the near-nakedness; the ones who were considered sexy for wearing them with short skirts or tops. Anyone who defends leggings for streetwear, in this next phase, will also sound like she lacks common sense. (Chilly in winter, tight and hot in summer.) Not to mention that they were a girly-girly look, while at that exact time the whole society was getting woke about androgynous looks. Leggings: sooooo 20th century! Wearing a démodé fashion too long means you have missed out on a social cue, an aesthetic cue, a class cue. It means you look foolish, poor, or old, or all three. They’re not called “old clothes” for nothing. Class and age unite at this stereotyped intersection, at this point in the cycle, to drag us down.

Anyone who regularly discards once-prized looks learns something unconsciously, far worse than that she misses taste cues. Going through the cycle involves emotional manipulation (of us) and continuing education (for us) that will go on as long as we decide we must participate — until old age, for some. I’m not interested in the detailed content of what each individual learns in order to launch themselves into a cycle again but rather in the unconscious emotional experiences that start with wanting a particular object, then getting it, living with it, and — the phase that is never discussed — discarding it. I focus here on the relinquishing that marks the end of the cycle, every time, and time after time.       

After all the visual reinforcement and psychic involvement with the look, almost ritualistic in character, there comes the going out of fashion (the end of that cycle). The emotions and the learning that come with the end of a major cycle are my true subject. “Who loses and who wins, who’s in, who’s out…” King Lear rightly begins with those who lose. The wartime “narrow” look became impossible. You, wearing a no-longer-desirable look, appear drab, uninteresting, passé — if not poor, then cheap. Unwilling to change, or unable to change. In a word, old. Suddenly ignored, or pitied, not admired. You must get rid of the once-loved object or look, or deny it, or at least belittle it to yourself.

This nebulous, disruptive phase (discarding) had had virtually no theorizing until I pointed it out in my 1997 book, Declining to Decline: Cultural Combat and the Politics of the Midlife, in a chapter called “The Other End of the Fashion Cycle.” But, however shadowy this crucial moment remains, it’s clear that there’s no excitement, pride, engagement, or pleasure. Where is the “you” that the cathected garment constructed? Is there a sense of having abandoned an important piece of selfhood, a whole time of life? Discarding involves some implicit rejection of the self that inhabited the ritual and this vanished part of your life. Is there any felt disappointment, dejection, reluctance, or resignation? An obscure sense of compulsion? (Some women keep and wear some of their old [sic] clothes, which may mitigate the dark internalizations of loss imposed by this end of the cycle. It has taken some nerve to wear my pleated 1980s pants betimes.) I suspect that most negative feelings are avoided by launching oneself gaily into the youth phase of the cycle once again. It may be then that some women rather desperately get Botox injections and a new wardrobe.

The question is what we learn unconsciously through the emotional manipulation of going through the cognitive/emotional cycle to its sad and disregarded end. The fashion cycle has been critiqued many times — for supporting femininity, shame, narcissism, obsolescence, wasteful consumption, abysmally low-wage work, and, now that the production process is better known, pollution. But it has never been considered as a practice through which culture constructs for us the meaning of “old” as necessary and inevitable loss. This is a modern process of socialization that happens to coincide with the era of mass-marketing of fashion, the more rapid turnover currently required by industry needs, and the rise of the new ageism, which is certainly worse for women than for men.

What I propose here is that going through market cycles with clothes taints our intuition of the meaning of the life course. The fashion cycle promotes a specific belief about what befalls the self in time. Discarding is the dangerous part because it is an unrepresented experience, an untheorized practice. Over time, the routine involves constant relearning, as well as altered emotions about such identity issues as durability versus transitoriness, investment of self versus withdrawal of self, and the most basic question about temporality: whether time can be relied upon to provide us with gain or loss. Discarding teaches us that the self can expect to lose from living in time.

Other aspects of ageism we know consciously. We are learning to be outraged that, since 1992, huge percentages of people over 40 have lost their jobs because of age discrimination. Aging-past-youth ought not to feel like a set of losses we can’t recover from. As a society beginning to understand ageism, we ought to recognize that aging is not a personal fault. But many people do blame themselves for growing older: they are ashamed, and they can’t imagine fighting back.

The obvious ways to learn to fear aging (say, from ads for plastic surgery, or pejorative uses of the word “old”), an apt student of culture can deride and reject. Going through major fashion cycles is a hidden, normalized way through which we learn that getting old is bad, that time is an enemy, and that aging is an unavoidable decline. It’s high time to raise our consciousness about this kind of learning, too.

¤

Margaret Morganroth Gullette’s latest book, Ending Ageism, or How Not to Shoot Old People (2017), won a prize from the American Psychological Association for contributions to women and aging, and an Award for Independent Scholars from the Modern Language Association. She first explored the psychological effects of buying, wearing, and discarding clothes in her book Declining to Decline: Cultural Combat and the Politics of the Midlife (1997), in a chapter called “The Other End of the Fashion Cycle.” She is a Resident Scholar at the Women’s Studies Research Center, Brandeis University.


Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/inside-the-fashion-cycle/

2019-11-30 20:04:52Z
CBMiPWh0dHBzOi8vbGFyZXZpZXdvZmJvb2tzLm9yZy9hcnRpY2xlL2luc2lkZS10aGUtZmFzaGlvbi1jeWNsZS_SAQA

The best Black Friday clothing and fashion deals you can still get - USA TODAY

— Recommendations are independently chosen by Reviewed’s editors. Purchases you make through our links may earn us a commission.

Black Friday is technically over, but the sales are continuing through the weekend. Here are the best deals you can still get on clothes, from brands like Rent the Runway, American Eagle, Spanx, and more.

1. 40% off everything at Rent the Runway

Prepare for the holiday season—and its many required outfit changes—with Rent the Runway's Black Friday and Cyber Weekend deals. Everything on the clothing rental site is 40 percent off with the code WEARITALL, whether you go for a one-off rental or regular subscription plan.

Get 40% off everything at Rent the Runway

2. Up to 50% off at Nordstrom

Clothes to help you keep cozy and fashionable all winter—like Spanx and Zella leggings, Free People sweaters, and Barbour jackets—are still on deep discount at Nordstrom. Grab 'em up now before they sell out.

Save up to 50% on select brands from Nordstrom

3. Up to 70% off at Alo Yoga

Alo Yoga gear is a staple among impossibly cool barre and yoga instructors (that is, if the classes I've attended are any indication). Today, it can become a staple in your wardrobe as well, with 30 percent off everything on the site and up to 70 percent off some sale items. Come to the sale for the brand's bestselling Airbrush leggings, stay for the half-zip Sherpa jacket.

Save up to 30 percent at Alo Yoga

4. 40% off everything at Aerie and American Eagle

Save on essentials like underwear, bras, jeans, leggings, sweaters, and PJs with Aerie and American Eagle's holiday deals: 40 percent off everything on the site, plus free shipping. You can also score 10 pairs of underwear for $30 at Aerie.

Get 40% off and free shipping at Aerie and American Eagle

5. At least 40% off everything at Levi's

Treat yourself to some classic denim with some assistance from Levi's Black Friday sale: 40% off everything, plus an extra 50% off the sale section with the code INDIGO. You can also get some pairs of jeans for $29.99 with the same code, which is half off their usual price—if that doesn't inspire you to grab some 505s or 310s, we don't know what will.

Get at least 40% off everything at Levi's

Other great deals

  • Abercrombie—40% off your order
  • Adidas—Up to 50% off select styles
  • Anthropologie—30% off everything
  • ASOS—30% off everything with code BIG30
  • Ban.do—30% off everything with code THIRTYOFF
  • Banana Republic - 50% off regular priced items
  • Bloomingdales—Take 15% off if you spend $100, 20% off if you spend $250, or 25% if you spend $400
  • Cole Haan—Up to 60% off, plus an extra 10% off with code BF10
  • Columbia Sportswear—50% off and free shipping
  • Everlane—Donating $10 for every purchase to Oceana
  • Gap—50% off everything with code BLKFRIDAY, plus an extra 10% off with code BESTEVER
  • Hanna Andersson—Kids’ pajama sets for $25 (Save $15-$20) and 40% off everything else
  • J.Crew—40% off your purchases with the code FRIDAY
  • J. Jill—40% off entire purchase with code JOY40
  • L.L.Bean—20% off your order with the code THANKS20
  • Lululemon—Get huge discount on active apparel
  • Madewell—30% off your purchase with the code GIFTWELL
  • Me Undies—Up to 60% off packs
  • Modcloth—20% off everything, 30% off orders of $100+, 40% off orders of $200+
  • Nike—up to 50% off sale styles with code SEASONMVP
  • Old Navy—50% off all sweaters and jeans on sale, plus $5 PJ pants for kids and adults
  • Outdoor Voices—25% off everything on the site with code THANKS25
  • Puma—40% off full price and 30% off sale price with code BLACKFRIYAY
  • Reebok—40% off site-wide and 50% off sale items
  • Reformation—30% off everything on the site
  • Revolve—up to 65% off select styles
  • Sweaty Betty—30% off everything with the code CHEERS
  • The North Face—25% off select styles
  • Topshop—Up to 50% off select styles and 20% off select bags and shoes
  • Under Armour—Up to 35% off on Amazon
  • Urban Outfitters—Buy one get one 50% off
  • Victoria's Secret—$20 off $125 and free shipping on orders over $50 with codes SAVE20VS and SHIP50

The product experts at Reviewed have all your shopping needs covered. Follow Reviewed on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for the latest deals, reviews, and more.

Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/reviewedcom/2019/11/30/black-friday-2019-best-clothing-and-fashion-deals-you-can-still-get/4226787002/

2019-11-30 16:25:00Z
CBMiigFodHRwczovL3d3dy51c2F0b2RheS5jb20vc3RvcnkvdGVjaC9yZXZpZXdlZGNvbS8yMDE5LzExLzMwL2JsYWNrLWZyaWRheS0yMDE5LWJlc3QtY2xvdGhpbmctYW5kLWZhc2hpb24tZGVhbHMteW91LWNhbi1zdGlsbC1nZXQvNDIyNjc4NzAwMi_SASdodHRwczovL2FtcC51c2F0b2RheS5jb20vYW1wLzQyMjY3ODcwMDI

Sustainable Labels That Make Conscious Fashion Look Extra Cool - Forbes

The world of fashion is ever changing. Trends hit the shelves like whirlwinds and get shunned into very-last-season inferno just as quickly. The illuminati or fashion gods that deem one thing cool and the other sacrilege are fickle to say the least. It appears that fashion, in general, is always inclined to snub one thing then glorify another. One day they’ll declare that mom jeans are shameful then bring back its glory on the runways the next. There was even a time when sweatpants and workout gear were exclusively for exercise or hiding bulges on a lazy day. Today, we have this chic little fashion category called athleisure.

Of the all things this fast-paced world has decided to embrace, it’s sustainable, mindful and conscious fashion that makes the strongest style statement. It is indication that among trendsetters, style makers and consumers, an ideological shift is occurring. This change in mindset gives high regard for quality over quantity. It demands rationale and purpose. More importantly, it is informed by ideals such as sustainability, inclusivity and diversity.

Here, a rundown of the progressive fashion labels out there today that make conscious fashion look extra cool:

VALERY KOVALSKI is a Ukrainian ready-to-wear label that offers unique alternatives to your usual black tie favorites. Pieces are designed with “neo-couture” sensibilities but still maintain the idea that they can be a wardrobe staples. The label encourages sustainable consumption, presenting collections that can transition through seasons and even years.

ALL THINGS MOCHI is an inspired label founded by designer Ayah Tabari. It was developed and built on a passion for discovering various parts of the world and celebrating cultures. Diversity and grassroots are at the core of All Things Mochi with pieces that take you around that world—The Philippines, Hungary, Uzbekistan, India, Morocco, Mexico, Polynesia and Spain, to name a few. The team works closely with local artisans, collaborating with them to bring their unique craft, cultural narrative and design sensibilities to the global stage.

CUYANA is a sustainable fashion brand that reinforces one fashion philosophy: “fewer, better.” Pieces from the label are foundational and designed with the sole intention of “offering an empowering perspective on style for women.” The team and the artisans they work with take pride in crafting pieces with integrity. At Cuyana, closets are meant to be functional, lean and well thought of. For the holidays, they are partnering with Sudanese-American poet Safia Elhillo for a seasonal campaign that emphasizes the power of gifting and the intentions we put into them. This is one of the things that distinguish Cuyana, making the brand one to look out for in 2020.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.forbes.com/sites/biancasalonga/2019/11/30/sustainable-labels-that-make-conscious-fashion-look-extra-cool/

2019-11-30 14:00:12Z
CBMidWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZvcmJlcy5jb20vc2l0ZXMvYmlhbmNhc2Fsb25nYS8yMDE5LzExLzMwL3N1c3RhaW5hYmxlLWxhYmVscy10aGF0LW1ha2UtY29uc2Npb3VzLWZhc2hpb24tbG9vay1leHRyYS1jb29sL9IBeWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZvcmJlcy5jb20vc2l0ZXMvYmlhbmNhc2Fsb25nYS8yMDE5LzExLzMwL3N1c3RhaW5hYmxlLWxhYmVscy10aGF0LW1ha2UtY29uc2Npb3VzLWZhc2hpb24tbG9vay1leHRyYS1jb29sL2FtcC8

How One Company Is Contributing To The Solution Of Reducing Fashion Waste - Forbes

Climate change and eliminating plastic and waste in the ocean have been hot topics leading up to the Presidential primary. Plastic straws alone have caused such a stir that States are beginning to require restaurants to serve non-plastic-based straws. What about the fashion industry? Do consumers ever wonder what happens to the seasonal styles that are never purchased?

According to Rubicon, fashion is the third highest-polluting industry in the world and microfibers from fabrics wind up in the ocean and threaten aquatic life. A 2016 McKinsey report revealed that three-fifths of all clothing items will end up in an incinerator or landfill within a year after being produced.

Founder of Bespoke Southerly, Sheri Turnbow’s mission is to contribute to the solution of reducing fashion waste. Bespoke enables women to customize their clothing so they get the colors and details they want that reflect their personal style. The core business model is geared toward harnessing the trend of apparel personalization and adopting the made-to-order manufacturing model. With more made-to-order apparel options, more quality clothing will be designed and less waste created.

While her impetus for using the made-to-order model originated from the excitement of being able to custom a dress with pockets, colors and fabric, the more research Turnbow underwent, the more she realized this model creates less waste because each garment is cut one at a time. “I'm definitely seeing a trend in the marketplace towards sustainability when it comes to fashion,” she states. “It's necessary because the fashion industry is one of the largest polluters, right? It's a resource intensive business for natural resources when you're growing cotton and other materials for textiles. The processing of the textiles is very resource intensive and can use a lot of toxic chemicals and dies. So, there's that issue of the resource intensity and pollution. Then of course, there's also the ethical side of things, which is that the factories in other countries where there aren’t necessarily good working conditions or living wages. I'm seeing all this come together under this umbrella of sustainable or ethical fashion.”

Prior to launching her own company, Turnbow worked as an agent in the fashion industry. After moving to Washington, D.C., her interest in non-profit organizations peaked. “I actually took a two-year job at an organization that focused on a lot of different things,” she explains, “but HIV AIDS is one of them, clean drinking water for kids in Africa and other things. HIV AIDS was close to me because of working in the fashion industry. That was actually a pretty major issue a couple decades ago…I did that and loved the nonprofit world, but my true personal passion has always been wildlife conservation.” She then transitioned over to working for two of the top conservation organizations in the world, The Nature Conservancy and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF). At these leading non-profit organizations partnering with corporations including Apple, Coca-Cola, Disney and Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., raising millions of dollars for wildlife conservation and sustainable business solutions.

Turnbow’s idea for the company stemmed from her need to find classic cocktail attire for charity events. “I always had a really hard time finding the right dress,” she expresses. “I remember growing up having this concept of investment dressing where you have fewer items in your closet, but they're high quality and they're timeless; you can wear them for season after season…Then I started thinking about how men have the opportunity to get custom clothing and particularly suits. There’s really nothing like that for women except maybe when you're in a bridal party, the bridesmaids’ dresses…So, I started doing a lot of research.”

Turnbow pivoted using her early career knowledge of the fashion and retail business and her more recent experience in corporate engagement and business sustainability. She created a brand and a company that utilizes what she’s learned over the years in both fields. “I also launched an ecommerce store that required custom coding to allow for the personalized orders,” she smiles. “I have self-funded the business and, as with most entrepreneurs, have hit a few bumps in the road. I wasted a lot of time and money on the wrong initial team. However, through relationships I built during this time and process, I was able to make connections to people with higher skill levels and knowledge and the final product available online now is due in large part to assembling that new group of experts.”

Through all of Turnbow’s transitions, she focuses on these essential steps:

  • Take your time. If you pivot too quickly without understanding what you want to do, you set yourself up for failure.
  • Research as much as possible. Understand how the industry works, the types of people you need to network with and the best time to pivot into a specific industry.
  • Understand that there are going to be days when you feel like you’ve made a mistake, and there will be days where you feel like a genius. Just keep going no matter what.

“My background is a little different,” Turnbow concludes. “I come from a business background, and I do not have a traditional fashion design training…I will say because of that, not having that training and being more of a business person, I approach things a little bit differently. Sometimes, even though that can be a little bit of a tougher path, because I don't know a lot of things that a traditional designer might know, sometimes it leads to creative approaches.”

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.forbes.com/sites/cherylrobinson/2019/11/30/how-one-company-is-contributing-to-the-solution-of-reducing-fashion-waste/

2019-11-30 14:00:00Z
CBMigQFodHRwczovL3d3dy5mb3JiZXMuY29tL3NpdGVzL2NoZXJ5bHJvYmluc29uLzIwMTkvMTEvMzAvaG93LW9uZS1jb21wYW55LWlzLWNvbnRyaWJ1dGluZy10by10aGUtc29sdXRpb24tb2YtcmVkdWNpbmctZmFzaGlvbi13YXN0ZS_SAQA

Jumat, 29 November 2019

Fashion's silent titans: The secret lives of press officers - Fashion - FRANCE 24

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Fashion's silent titans: The secret lives of press officers - Fashion  FRANCE 24
https://www.france24.com/en/culture/20191129-fashion-silent-titans-secret-lives-press-officers-brands-marketing-1

2019-11-29 11:35:00Z
CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZyYW5jZTI0LmNvbS9lbi9jdWx0dXJlLzIwMTkxMTI5LWZhc2hpb24tc2lsZW50LXRpdGFucy1zZWNyZXQtbGl2ZXMtcHJlc3Mtb2ZmaWNlcnMtYnJhbmRzLW1hcmtldGluZy0x0gEA

Before you jump on the Black Friday sales train ask yourself: do you need this? - The Guardian

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Before you jump on the Black Friday sales train ask yourself: do you need this?  The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/nov/29/black-friday-sale-fashion-clothes-shopping

2019-11-29 05:15:00Z
CAIiEKrTnV03BLWLlFiX_5ZyZ6QqFggEKg4IACoGCAowl6p7MN-zCTC9vBU

Kamis, 28 November 2019

Montana Company Sues A Fashion Giant Over Copyrighted Camo Print - NPR

Camouflage fashion is everywhere. A Montana company that makes camo primarily for hunters is suing fashion giant Supreme for poaching its copyrighted camo pattern.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.npr.org/2019/11/28/783551079/montana-company-sues-fashion-giant-over-copyrighted-camo-print

2019-11-28 10:09:00Z
CBMiZ2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5wci5vcmcvMjAxOS8xMS8yOC83ODM1NTEwNzkvbW9udGFuYS1jb21wYW55LXN1ZXMtZmFzaGlvbi1naWFudC1vdmVyLWNvcHlyaWdodGVkLWNhbW8tcHJpbnTSAQA

Rabu, 27 November 2019

Every Black Friday Fashion Sale Worth Shopping Can Be Found Here - Refinery29

Whether you’re pre-shopping for a holiday party outfit, scouting out sturdy boots, or trying to stay warm in the unexpected cold with a few new sweaters, you’ll find it all here. So, grab your gift list and see if you can't cross a few things off before the digital throngs assemble on the Friday to end all Fridays. Be sure to check back throughout the month for updates to this annual A-Z guide to the holiday season’s best fashion sales. From hefty markdowns to promo codes, we’ll keep you abreast of all the best deals leading up to November 29.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2019/11/8790911/black-friday-clothing-sales-2019

2019-11-27 15:00:00Z
CBMiUWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnJlZmluZXJ5MjkuY29tL2VuLXVzLzIwMTkvMTEvODc5MDkxMS9ibGFjay1mcmlkYXktY2xvdGhpbmctc2FsZXMtMjAxOdIBVWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnJlZmluZXJ5MjkuY29tL2FtcC9lbi11cy8yMDE5LzExLzg3OTA5MTEvYmxhY2stZnJpZGF5LWNsb3RoaW5nLXNhbGVzLTIwMTk

Versace Sues Fashion Nova For Knocking Off Famous Jennifer Lopez ‘Jungle’ Dress - Forbes

Topline: Italian fashion house Versace sued Fashion Nova, a fast fashion retailer, in California Monday for allegedly copying some of its most popular designs, including the iconic green “Jungle” dress famously worn by Jennifer Lopez at the 2000 Grammy Awards.

  • Versace’s 35-page complaint, filed Monday in California’s U.S. district court, seeks a jury trial to stop Fashion Nova from selling the offending clothes and asks to be paid attorney’s fees and other damages.
  • Besides the Jennifer Lopez “Jungle” dress the complaint alleges Fashion Nova copied its multicolored “Pop Heart” and black and gold “Barocco” print designs in other dresses.
  • Versace says it owns the copyrights and trademarks for the designs Fashion Nova allegedly replicated, which will “confuse and mislead” customers of the haute couture brand.
  • In addition, the complaint accuses Fashion Nova of tagging its webpages selling the offending designs with the Versace name and other trademarked words to boost its visibility on search engines and on social media.
  • The complaint also says Fashion Nova is able to rapidly create so many new designs because of “its willingness to copy the copyrighted designs, trademarks and trade dress elements of well-known designers such as Versace.”
  • This is not the first time Fashion Nova has been blasted for allegedly copying other designers’ looks⁠—in February, Kim Kardashian called out the company for selling a recreated Thierry Mugler dress after wearing the original to an awards show.  

Representatives for Versace and Fashion Nova did not immediately respond to requests for comment by Forbes.

Crucial quote: “Fashion Nova’s Infringing Apparel is plainly a deliberate effort to exploit the popularity and renown of Versace’s signature designs, and to trade on Versace’s valuable goodwill and business reputation in order to drive profits and sales to line Fashion Nova’s pockets,” the complaint reads.

Surprising fact: Versace released a fast fashion collection in 2011 with H&M.

Key background: Versace, based in Milan, Italy, was founded by namesake Gianni Versace in 1971. Including Jennifer Lopez, celebrities like Elton John, Princess Diana, Princess Caroline of Monaco and more have worn the fashion house’s designs. Versace’s parent company is Capri Holdings Ltd., which also owns Jimmy Choo and Michael Kors. Versace was acquired for over $2 billion in 2018, but Capri kept on Donatella Versace as the brand’s creative director.

Tangent: Fast fashion is a hugely popular sector of clothing sales, and is projected to generate $44 billion in sales by 2028. Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj devoted an episode to exploring copyright issues and the environmental impact in the manufacturing⁠—and then trashing⁠—of so much inexpensive clothing. 

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.forbes.com/sites/lisettevoytko/2019/11/27/versace-sues-fashion-nova-for-knocking-off-famous-jennifer-lopez-jungle-dress/

2019-11-27 14:00:37Z
52780449211997

Fashion trends: Vintage clothes and streetwear popular in Louisville - Courier Journal

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Fashion trends: Vintage clothes and streetwear popular in Louisville  Courier Journal
https://www.courier-journal.com/media/cinematic/gallery/4311666002/check-out-the-vintage-and-streetwear-trends-taking-over-louisville-fashion/

2019-11-27 11:54:01Z
CBMijgFodHRwczovL3d3dy5jb3VyaWVyLWpvdXJuYWwuY29tL21lZGlhL2NpbmVtYXRpYy9nYWxsZXJ5LzQzMTE2NjYwMDIvY2hlY2stb3V0LXRoZS12aW50YWdlLWFuZC1zdHJlZXR3ZWFyLXRyZW5kcy10YWtpbmctb3Zlci1sb3Vpc3ZpbGxlLWZhc2hpb24v0gEA

Senin, 25 November 2019

Secondhand clothes: A shift in shopping habits that's changing the fashion industry - News 5 Cleveland

CLEVELAND — People are becoming more aware of problems with fast fashion, or inexpensive clothing that is rapidly produced. Apparel and footwear production account for 8% of global greenhouse gas emission.

The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that the average American throws away 81 lbs. of clothes per year.

But there’s a new trend in the fashion world that doesn’t seem to be going out of style: repurposing, reselling, re-wearing.

Second hand fashion is driven by Generation Z and Millennials. Millennials like Sarah Sapola from Lakewood.

“I think a lot of people associate being fashionable and trendy with expensive name brand things and that’s just not the case anymore,” she said. “70 to 80% of all my clothes are either thrifted, second hand, things like that.”

What’s old can always be made new again, and that rings true at Avalon Exchange in Cleveland.

“We are a resale shop. We buy from the public 7 days a week, that’s how we get all of the stock we have,” said Krystin Coleman, the manager of the store.

Clothes, shoes, bags, all things others didn’t want anymore.

The store sells about 30% of its items on its Instagram page. There you’ll find a Michael Kors jacket for $40, a pair of Converse for $26, a BCBG dress that was originally 300$ selling for just $34.

“There’s nothing like the feeling of finding something that could actually be something that is your new favorite piece, and knowing that you only paid $10 for it,” said Misty Hughes, a customer.

Coleman said it’s all about the money- the deals and the payouts.

“There’s been this big shift in people realizing there’s a market for them to make money off of their items and it’s not just ‘Oh, let’s go drop them off somewhere.”

Websites like Rent the Runway, Poshmark, ThredUp, and even Facebook Marketplace are helping drive the industry and putting a pin in the fast fashion balloon.

By 2023, sales of secondhand goods will reach $51 billion dollars.

“We are definitely seeing a shift in the way people think about fast fashion and clothing,” said Coleman.

In 10 years, secondhand is projected to be even larger than the fast fashion industry.
.
“From disposing your garments, to washing your garments, to buying them, there’s little, tiny changes that we can make to help fix the problem,” said Sapola.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.news5cleveland.com/news/originals/secondhand-clothes-a-shift-in-shopping-habits-thats-changing-the-fashion-industry

2019-11-25 11:51:00Z
CBMif2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5ld3M1Y2xldmVsYW5kLmNvbS9uZXdzL29yaWdpbmFscy9zZWNvbmRoYW5kLWNsb3RoZXMtYS1zaGlmdC1pbi1zaG9wcGluZy1oYWJpdHMtdGhhdHMtY2hhbmdpbmctdGhlLWZhc2hpb24taW5kdXN0cnnSAQA

Retail Goes Ready Player One: A Hot Second, The Proto-Flagship For Our Virtual Fashion Futures - Forbes

Digital fashion is a white-hot topic that’s also rippling with real-world confusion. While it’s a fulcrum burning with possibilities (sales of virtual loot boxes and clothes, a.k.a. ‘skins’ in games is predicted to hit $50bn by 2022, and the first piece of ‘digital couture’ sold for $9500 in May 2019) exactly how the overlaps between IRL identities and URL desires will play out remains a creative and commercial sticking point.

Looking to move that conversation on, last week saw the London launch of A Hot Second – a highly prescient proto-flagship in East London designed for ‘selling’ virtual style to digi-curious consumers.  

While the tech was imperfect & the laudable eco-relevance at times addressed with some confusion, British Fashion Futurist & Lecturer Karinna Nobbs’ multi-brand beta concept (a pop-up for now) posited not only vital ideas concerning retailing digital clothing to generation gaming, opportunities for luxury brand culture and also a bigger picture glimpse into the transition to virtual living.

How it Worked: The Digital Fashion 101

To be considered a lab above all else, on entering the ‘store’ visitors stepped into booths equipped with ‘magic mirrors’, allowing them to virtually slip into something more (and sometimes less) comfortable: one of four looks rendered by digital fashion pioneers and in some instances their brand partners. Norwegian streetwear brand Carlings created a metallic tracksuit in collaboration with Danish creative agency Virtue; Dutch ‘digital fashion house’ The Fabricant floated a catwalk-ready statement piece from its own exclusively digital collection called Deep (a silk paisley jumpsuit with chunky fur sleeves); while 3D designer Emily Switzer recreated British designer Christopher Raeburn’s union jack ‘safety’ parka.

There was also a virtual replication of Kansai Yamamoto’s famous ‘Tokyo Pop’ PVC Kabuki jumpsuit worn by David Bowie in the early ‘70s – a telling nod to Nobbs’ other first love: vintage fashion.  

The magic mirror mechanism felt rudimentary in parts (garments more cardboard cut-out clunky than contour-clinging bombshells of virtual seduction) and the takeaway limited to a static print-out or email-able photo of the visitor in their chosen look, so no capacity to carry the clothing into another online dimension. But the key sentiment – to experience the pleasure and personal empowerment of digital dress-up – was beguilingly intact.

Nerdy to Normal, Almost   

While according to a 2019 YPulse report, 71% of Gen Z’ers are happy to identify themselves as gamers, with 84% believing that it’s cool to play video games, the aim, says Nobbs, was to introduce digital fashion to the curious but uninitiated. That includes those for whom the gaming movement and its abundance of un-real second-life accoutrements still feels entirely disconnected from the everyday catharsis of high-street shopping.

According to Nobbs: “Digital fashion can be a hard concept to swallow. Mr. Benn [the iconic 1971 British cartoon where a smartly-dressed businessman assumes a new character/magical adventure every time when he enters the changing room of his local fancy-dress shop] was a major inspiration. That sense of transformation, of playing with identity, was a key element of the experimentation.”

Stoking a Virtual Fire: Why Artifice & Illusion Matters

It’s no coincidence that the aforementioned piece of ($9500) digital couture, a hyper-real shimmering maxi dress called Iridescence, was created by The Fabricant in collaboration with Berlin-based artist Johanna Jaskowska. Jaskowska designed the wildly popular Beauty3000 Instagram filter – a facial overlay best described aesthetically as cyborg-luxe.

The virtual mask reveals that while the trend for the imperfect perfect, of showing flaws, maybe widely trumpeted, the capacity to reinvent oneself at will be a stronger sell in a cultural climate of near-chameleonic fluidity: “This is about the capacity to realize ourselves as something other,” says Nobbs.

As such there is mileage, even liberation, in the digital ‘deception’, of knowing an image is doctored. Hence the rise of post-Lil Miquela digital celebrities including Shudu Gram, one of three virtual models to depose the omnipresent Kardashians in a recent Balmain campaign.

British consumer psychologist Paul Marsden explains the mentality: “In a bizarre way, virtual avatars are more authentic than ‘real’ influencers. There’s a knowingness which is comforting for young people. The fantasy is less oppressive than airbrushed reality, or an apparently perfect-looking life.”

Eco-Enlightenment

To emphasize the eco-excellence of digital fashion (no physical pieces means zero real-world resources) Nobbs also partnered with UK business Love Not Landfill, a charity that redistributes old clothing, requesting that those who wanted to try the experience donated an unwanted garment to participate. Laudable yet unnecessary – indulging in digital rather than physical fashion is a sustainability win in and of itself – Nobbs also disclosed the need to create a psychological value exchange. “To pay for a service in some way, even if not monetarily, is essential to cementing a sense of worth.”

What Virtual Shoppers Want (& The Luxury Brand Opportunity)

Luxury brands are fast wising up to the in-game opportunity – in 2018 Gucci recreated 200 pieces in virtual form for US messaging app Genies, while Louis Vuitton has just designed a series of skins for online multiplayer game, League of Legends that will be matched by real-life counterparts in the coming months. But a still-more pressing opportunity may lie in resuscitating archival pieces – a trend aligned to the booming resales market.

Post-pop-up this weekend Nobbs affirmed that the appetite for trialling vintage garments was as high as the capacity for wild new fashion inventions. “The desire to try on a historic garment was huge. The jumpsuit was the most shared on social media, but I also had people asking about things like being able to try on Princess Diana’s wedding dress. People loved the idea of visiting an exhibition or show and getting to try on the looks. True vintage lovers said it would make them extremely happy to interact with things they could never access or get IRL”.

Raeburn has already mooted the idea of using his parka rendering as start of a larger virtual archive.

The Phygital Brand Hangout

The physical space, too, may be key to future commercial seduction, considering the emerging interplay between physical and online communities. At a recent panel debate in London hosted by American fashion styling recommendations business Vue.ai, Remo Gettini, Chief Technology Officer at wildly popular peer-to-peer e-tail platform Depop, confirmed that many of its sellers with shared interests are creating IRL community groups, while users of Chinese video sharing social media app TikTok are similarly expanding their e-connections into real-world meet-ups. As such, a physical hangout may be an invaluable piece of the virtual style community.

What’s Next? Berlin + Blockchain To Take It Transactional

Nobbs is already producing the second iteration of the concept store, to launch in Berlin in January 2020. The reboot will focus on clothing that’s actually wearable online, on the buyer’s avatar, and is a tradable asset. The idea echoes Iridescence, which was backed by blockchain business Dapper Labs, meaning it’s both a piece of clothing and a form of crypto currency.

To do so she’s already engaged German blockchain specialists LUKSO, with the brand/designer partner still to be revealed: “Tokenization is key. The next stage is having items that are transferrable into online worlds that that can be traded as an asset.” As yet there’s no centralized space for this virtual economy, no Ready Player One style matrix to strut into, but the promise is closing in.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.forbes.com/sites/katiebaron/2019/11/25/retail-goes-ready-player-one-a-hot-second-the-proto-flagship-for-our-virtual-fashion-futures/

2019-11-25 08:20:55Z
CAIiEPlNHUPMndurgWz5sGY7ojAqFQgEKg0IACoGCAowrqkBMKBFMJGBAg

Minggu, 24 November 2019

Shippensburg Fashion Archives and Museum features a collection of 15,000 historical items - Public Opinion

Karin Bohleke never quite imagined herself becoming a director of a historical fashion museum, but she's realized it's just the type of work she's always been destined for.

"I didn't take a direct path to become a costume historian, but my mom started me knitting when I was three and embroidering by the time I was four," she said. "I've been running a sewing machine since I was seven."

When Bohleke was growing up in Canada, her favorite place in the world was the Royal Ontario Museum.

"I used to look at the pretty dresses first, namely the costume exhibit and then look at the musical instruments and all the old harpsichords that nobody plays anymore," she remembered. "Then I had to talk to the mummies and go through the dinosaurs."

Her fate was sealed through those visits.

"Well, I'm now a costume historian," she said. "I learned to play the flute, the piano and the harpsichord. I married an Egyptologist and lived in Egypt. He's an amateur paleontologist who knows about dinosaur bones - so it was all there when I was three years old."

Bohleke oversees a collection of nearly 15,000 articles of clothing, shoes and accessories at the Fashion Archives and Museum at Shippensburg University.

The museum was started back in 1980 by her predecessor, Elizabeth Thompson, whose rack of historical clothing in her office grew exponentially over the past 30 years - mostly through donations.

Bohleke was hired by the university in 2007 and teaches multiple classes in addition to her work in the archives.

Building new exhibits for the public is an essential part of the museum's mission, and Bohleke enjoys bringing the personality of clothes to life through themed exhibitions.

Her most recent endeavor? “Fashionable Dances and Dancing Fashions.”

Still under construction, the display will feature the garb of dancers through the eras, dating from 1810 all the way up to the disco craze of the 1970s.

Walking through the exhibition space, one may not realize the intense amount of work that goes into setting it up - from restoring moth-eaten wool dresses to widdling down modern mannequins to fit the clothes of smaller generations.

But Bohleke and her team of volunteers and students find pride in such detail-oriented work.

For students, the space offers real-world experience in curation, restoration and research.

Kayla Feeney, a sophomore interdisciplinary art and history major, said working here provides her a step-ahead in this line of work.

"Working with clothes gives you a lot of experience because that's really needed in that industry," she said. "Not a lot of people know how to work with clothing artifacts."

Taylor Schmaltz, a freshman public history major, said every day in the museum teaches her something new.

"On my first day I got to help hem a dress," she said. "It was from 1810."

Sarah Martin, a sophomore history major, has always loved museums.

"Getting to see the background of what goes into an exhibit is really cool for me," she said. "I didn't realize how much work gets put into it."

Anthony James, a graduate assistant, said he's developed a thorough skillset through his work here that has given him more confidence.

"It was very daunting at first," he said. "There's just a lot of random skills that are useful that you wouldn't necessarily think of. Every day, there's something new and exciting." 

One of those "skills" Feeney learned on the job was making hands for the male mannequins in the new exhibit.

"We had to do it in a specific way so they could be positioned how they would be for dance," she said. "I used pipe cleaners and batting so that you can wrap the batting around the pipe cleaners and sew it, then they're flexible enough to bend as fingers."

For volunteers, every day in the museum offers a new opportunity to learn how to give the past new life.

Joann Duningan has volunteered at Shippensburg University's Fashion Archives and Museum for three years helping to restore historical fabrics for display.

"It's time-consuming work," she said, as she rethreaded a red and brown flower-patterned dress from the 1800s.

"They just have a lot of personality," Duningan said. "Even though there's a certain style for that era, every dress is different because of the detail, the trim, the way things should fit. It's really like looking at completely individual people when you look at completely individual dresses."

The majority of the collection is carefully tucked away in the building's temperature and heating-controlled bottom level, where everything is carefully labeled, organized and kept away from constant exposure to light that could damage the fragile fabric over time.

When it's not in the archives, clothing often travels to different historical centers across the region and is featured in other museum displays as well.

"The collection here is so large that we do a lot of loans to museums, they turn to us for holdings," she said. "I have good relationships with these museums and I borrow from them as well, because no one museum can own everything."

In addition to the plethora of textiles, the museum also offers a unique library of clothing reference books, patterns for historical garments, fashion magazines and shopping catalogs.

"Anybody in the community can come and do research," Bohleke said. "This is where you can do phenomenal research - not just on clothing, but other things that people used to buy."

Such work by Bohleke and her team in preserving and restoring integral pieces of historical context remind the community of how much the fashion industry has changed. 

Since the 1960s, mass production of clothing has turned into a trend of "fast and disposable fashion" and has had a heavy impact on the environment, according to Bohleke.

"The fashion industry is among the top three world polluters," she said. "Right now we're on an unsustainable cycle of more and more and more and they are conditioning people to expect to have to buy clothing about every week."

There's been a shift in the way clothes are made, and perhaps, Bohleke said, that's why people find displays like these so intriguing.

"I think this is really where we get fascinated and see how our ancestors lived - what they made with their own hands," she said. "People aren't brought up to make things with their hands anymore."

“Fashionable Dances and Dancing Fashions” opening date will be announced soon and will run until July 2, 2020. Updates will be posted on the Fashion Archives and Museum of Shippensburg University's website.

More: Shippensburg University play taught me something about my mother's death

More: Check out these 40 (and counting!) Christmas events in the Franklin County region

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.publicopiniononline.com/story/news/local/2019/11/24/shippensburg-fashion-archives-showcases-over-200-years-clothes/4273365002/

2019-11-24 15:00:00Z
CAIiEBPacY_KdvN88sOWlVYTF4sqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow2IuACzD12IsDMNO59wU

Iris van Herpen has a new approach to fashion - NWAOnline

When many people think of couture they think of the most traditional, time-intensive kind of fashion; of seamstresses and tailors in white coats bent over intricate swathes of material painstakingly sewing by hand the way they have since the days of Charles Frederick Worth and Christian Dior (and Marie Antoinette, for that matter).

Iris van Herpen, however, a 35-year-old Dutch designer who founded her own company in 2007, has always thought of something different.

She has thought of the way the sewing needle -- an early tool -- might translate into the tools of tomorrow; might, for example, connect to the 3-D printer and the laser cutter. She has explored such themes as "biopiracy" and "magnetic motion"; has combined mylar and copper with tulle and organza. Her dresses often appear to have their own energy field and look as though they are terraforming the body.

It is an attitude that has landed her pieces in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Her first solo exhibit, "Transforming Fashion," originally shown at the Groninger Museum in the Netherlands, traveled from the Dallas Museum of Art to the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Most recently, she created a concrete frieze to wrap the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, the Netherlands' natural history museum. She works in Amsterdam.

This conversation has been edited and condensed.

Q What would you like people to know about your work?

A That there is a line that runs from craftsmanship through innovation and technology that can be explicitly explored in fashion to weave new identity, new forms of femininity. Technology is a very powerful tool, in the same way the hand is a powerful tool, and combined with craftsmanship it can create a new language of shape, beauty and touch. The world is changing so rapidly, and fashion doesn't always explore that -- it very much likes to look back, to where we came from -- but for me, it is about looking forward, into the unknown.

Also, that my work often looks different to how it feels. There's usually a presumption that the clothes will be difficult to wear, because they don't always look like the clothes we are familiar with, but that is perception rather than reality. The process of design happens on the body. I put most of it on myself. You can even put most of it in the washing machine.

Q What did you want to be when you were a child?

A A dancer. I grew up in a really small town in the middle of Holland called Wamel. It's so small, even if you say the name to a Dutch person they probably won't know it. We didn't have a television, or a computer. But we had dance. I grew up with dance -- my mother was a dance teacher, and I did classical ballet from a very young age and really loved it. For me, it was about the power between mind and matter, the way you can transform your body, as well as the effort that goes into it: the training and discipline. I really like pushing myself. I think that is when I became fascinated by movement. I still take a lot from what I learned.

Q Who or what inspired you to go into your field?

A When I was 16 I moved to Amsterdam, because there was no high school in my town, and that's when I became aware of fashion, both because it was around me and because I was at an age when you become aware of how you can express yourself and your identity through clothes. When I was 18 I went to Arnhem to go to the art academy. At the academy, I learned a lot about fashion technique, but the way it was taught and talked about was very traditional, and I felt quite disconnected from it. It wasn't until after that I had my world opened up and started seeing fashion in the context of a lot of other disciplines: biology, architecture, art.

Q Where do you find sources of creativity?

A I am most inspired by people in other fields. The choreographers Benjamin Millepied and Sasha Waltz taught me to look at the body in a different way; to look at the space around the body as much as the body itself and how we can affect both. Philip Beesley, the architect and sculptor, is someone I worked with for six years, and his creative process and philosophy were very influential. And for me, CERN, where I have been a few times, is one of the most special places on this planet. Thousands of scientists working together! It's not that I am going there to make a dress out of the Large Hadron Collider. It doesn't work like that. I go there to ask questions and find out what I don't know.

Q How does technology interact with your profession?

A Fashion tends to treat technology as a platform for communication, but it goes way beyond that. We use 3-D printers, laser cutting, heat bonding. Recently we have been experimenting with 4-D printers: they code movement into the material, so it transforms. Currently fashion is very much considered disposable, but this could be a tool to improve a garment over the long term, so we are less dependent on mass production. The potential of technology merged with craft is infinite. It blows your mind.

Q What obstacles do you face in your field?

A I used to think it was hard to be a woman running a company, but now my company is mostly female, and it feels very powerful. It's probably more the difficulty of being a small brand and competing with big groups and globalization. But I also think that as a smaller company, you have an advantage because you can innovate much more freely and focus on quality instead of quantity. I make 50 to 80 pieces a year, for clients around the world, and that is enough.

Q How do you define success?

A It's not about money or fame -- as long as I have enough money to have the freedom to create what needs to be created. On a micro level, I feel success when we have reached a new level of technique, or created a new kind of material. On a macro level, I think it is helping people reach a new understanding of beauty, especially people who don't necessarily connect to fashion. One of the cliches about fashion is that it is superficial, and for me, it is very special to see when people have changed their minds about that.

Q How do you plan to change your field?

A A lot of companies don't really want to move forward; they aren't driven by innovation, but by functionality, time and money. I am trying constantly to have people around me who want to push boundaries and see fashion as an important tool in society.

Q What is the biggest challenge facing your field?

A It has to be the environmental crisis, though that is a challenge facing us all. Fashion is one of the most polluting industries in the world, and our production methods and materials are simply not sustainable enough. On the other hand, I do think there are a lot of things that are going well, especially in the change that has occurred around what we accept as beauty. That is so powerful, and so positive.

High Profile on 11/24/2019

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nwaonline.com/news/2019/nov/24/iris-van-herpen-has-a-new-approach-to-f/

2019-11-24 08:13:17Z
CBMiU2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm53YW9ubGluZS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDE5L25vdi8yNC9pcmlzLXZhbi1oZXJwZW4taGFzLWEtbmV3LWFwcHJvYWNoLXRvLWYv0gEA

Kamis, 21 November 2019

Fashion comes to Springfield - Illinois Times

click to enlarge Cassie models ‘Lady Reverie’ by Severyn Beekman. - PHOTO BY MICHAEL KANE / MK PHOTOGRAPHY

Photo by Michael Kane / MK Photography

Cassie models ‘Lady Reverie’ by Severyn Beekman.

A body-painted model walks the runway in a flowing dress made from trash and an ornate headdress of flowers. A dress sculpted from 140 pages of Veranda magazine intrigues the crowd. A model glows with illuminated LED lighting sending pink blooms dancing skyward with iridescent rhinestones. Vintage clothing finds a new life on the runway raising money for a good cause.

"There's really nothing quite like fashion," said Clare Frachey, local artist and Prevention Educator at Prairie Center Against Sexual Assault. "I think many artists and creative people in Springfield are drawn to that because it has to do with adorning and decorating our bodies. It's grounding and empowering when it comes to the idea that everyone is beautiful."

Springfield has truly embraced the art of fashion with many local businesses and art galleries recently hosting packed runway shows. "Fashion allows for a different kind of exhibition," said Frachey, "where the art is taken from off the walls and into real-time life."

Clare has been involved in several recent fashion shows both as an organizer and an artist. "Seeing my dress featured by two different models in two different shows was truly an honor," said Frachey. Her design, titled "This dress is trash," showcases her talent as an assemblage artist. "I made a dress out of plastic bags and packaging and I had a lot of fun with it."

In September Willow & Birch Salon hosted "An Oddities Fashion Show" – a mixed-media fashion experience incorporating body painting, abstract fashion and interactive modeling. "The event organizer, Claudia Knight, had a vision for how she wanted to intentionally break out of the mold of traditional modeling and fashion exhibition," said Frachey. "She has a passion for creating themes and characters using body paint and makeup. From this idea I think she formatted the show around painted models that were showing off the work of local designers."

In October The Pharmacy Gallery & Art Space hosted "The Art of Fashion," a collaborative fashion show featuring local designers, artists and models. "This was a part of a fashion show series The Pharmacy has every other year," said Frachey. "They wanted this year's show to be more interesting and so their directive was to showcase wearable art."

In November the Prairie Center Against Sexual Assault hosted its annual "Dare To Be Different" fashion show in partnership with Springfield Vintage. The event featured local models wearing vintage fashion and performances from local female musicians.

"Producing a fashion show requires commitment and teamwork," said Frachey, reflecting on her work. "My favorite thing about helping put these shows on is watching everyone come together and make a great event happen. One of the successes is the fact that we can pull these events off in our town to the extent that the demand for them grows. I think that definitely says something."

Joseph Copley is production designer for Illinois Times and co-publisher of Activator, the music and arts magazine.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.illinoistimes.com/springfield/fashion-comes-to-springfield/Content?oid=11527103

2019-11-21 07:00:48Z
CBMiW2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmlsbGlub2lzdGltZXMuY29tL3NwcmluZ2ZpZWxkL2Zhc2hpb24tY29tZXMtdG8tc3ByaW5nZmllbGQvQ29udGVudD9vaWQ9MTE1MjcxMDPSAWpodHRwczovL3d3dy5pbGxpbm9pc3RpbWVzLmNvbS9zcHJpbmdmaWVsZC9mYXNoaW9uLWNvbWVzLXRvLXNwcmluZ2ZpZWxkL0NvbnRlbnQ_b2lkPTExNTI3MTAzJm1lZGlhPUFNUCtIVE1M