211
Fashion Jobs
BULGARI
Sales Administrator
Permanent · AUCKLAND
H&M
Visual Merchandiser Manager- Newmarket
Permanent · AUCKLAND
AESOP
Retail Business Manager | New Zealand
Permanent ·
ABBOTT
Tpm Contract Manufacturing Manager
Permanent · AUCKLAND
L'OREAL GROUP
Key Account Manager
Permanent · AUCKLAND
SWAROVSKI
Sales Consultant - Newmarket
Fixed-term · AUCKLAND
PANDORA
Seasonal Sales Team Member (Queensgate)
Fixed-term · WELLINGTON
JD SPORTS
Casual Sales Assistant - Manukau
Permanent · AUCKLAND
JD SPORTS
3ic - Manukau
Permanent · AUCKLAND
ICEBREAKER
Icebreaker : Sales Associate, Keyholder - Queenstown Touchlab
Permanent · QUEENSTOWN
ZARA
Zara Sylvia Park Casual Sales Assistant
Permanent · AUCKLAND
ZARA
Zara Sylvia Park Full Time Sales Assistant
Permanent · AUCKLAND
JUST JEANS
2 x Part Time - Sales Assistant - Just Jeans nz - Lower Hutt
Permanent · WELLINGTON
JUST JEANS
Part Time - Sales Assistant - Just Jeans nz - Whangarei
Permanent · AUCKLAND
JUST JEANS
Casual - Sales Assistant - Just Jeans nz - Hastings
Permanent · HAWKE'S BAY
ESSILORLUXOTTICA GROUP
Retail Associate | Opsm Chartwell
Permanent · HAMILTON
ESSILORLUXOTTICA GROUP
Assistant Store Manager i Oakley Vault Onehunga
Permanent · AUCKLAND
ESSILORLUXOTTICA GROUP
Retail Associate | Sunglass Hut Botany
Permanent · AUCKLAND
ICEBREAKER
Icebreaker : Sales Associate, Casual - Queenstown Touchlab
Permanent · QUEENSTOWN
PANDORA
Seasonal Sales Team Member (Lambton Quay)
Fixed-term · WELLINGTON
PORTMANS
Assistant Store Manager - Portmans nz - Riccarton
Permanent · CHRISTCHURCH
PORTMANS
Store Manager - Portmans nz - Shore City
Permanent · AUCKLAND
By
AFP
Published
Sep 12, 2017
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Blondie backs experimental eco-fashion in London show

By
AFP
Published
Sep 12, 2017

 Blondie star Debbie Harry took to the London catwalk Monday to support sustainably fabrics created by VIN + OMI, designers experimenting with everything from environmentally-friendly latex to leather-style mushrooms.


Blondie backs experimental eco-fashion in London show - AFP


Draped in a golden gown and flanked by the design duo, wearing hoodies reading "Stop fucking the planet", singer Harry said the world had reached a "tipping point" and desperately needed to tackle waste.

"I think that they have a great purpose and a great focus in trying to make these sustainable fabrics that are part of the future," the 72-year-old musician told AFP.

"I think it's very important for everybody to recognise it and should be involved in it; because we all are inevitably," she added.

Harry was speaking after walking in VIN + OMI's Spring/Summer 2018 collection, ahead of London Fashion Week starting on Friday, which highlighted the issue of plastic waste.

Wearing heels encased in plastic and stepping through clear plastic strewn across the floor, models showed off a bold collection including slogans such as "wake up" and "hope".

There was a wide range of fabrics used in the show, which the designers said proves environmentally-friendly materials can still make the runway.

"It can still look great, it doesn't have to look like hessian sacks when you're making eco-fashion," designer Vin told AFP.

Most of the new collection is made from materials created out of recycled plastic, a technique the designers experimented with around seven years ago when they made t-shirts each created from 11 bottles.

"You can make fur-type fabric out of plastic bottles, so you don't need to wear fur. Any type of fabric now can be made out of plastic-based material," explained Vin.

- Pineapple as leather -

But they are also looking beyond plastic and towards natural products which can produce clothes in a more sustainable way.

"We've been working with a scientist in Spain who pioneered pineapple skins as leather," said Omi.

"We're now looking at locally-sourced chestnuts, that's in abundance here, and it's got the same texture, the same feel to pineapple," he added, recognising that the manufacturing process was however very expensive.

Mushrooms which can be grown to imitate leather, and sustainable latex sourced in Malaysia, are also on the cards.

Although the creation of such fabrics currently comes with high costs, the designers are keen to share their research and have their sights set on an overhaul of the fashion industry.

"We want everyone to do it so we can create a global awareness of what can be done, and then governments will change and there will be more processing plants and we can hopefully just get everybody wearing what they've thrown away," said Vin.

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.