Lara Miller: Green, Joyous and Sophisticated

September 12th, 2009 by dennis

Lara-Miller-fall-2009-3

As we kiss good bye to summer with heavy rains in many parts of the world, I am sure that many of us started digging their wardrobes for autumn pieces. I thought Lara Miller’s Autumn 2009 collection could be inspiring for those who prefer eco-clothing.

Being a Lexus Hybrid Living Sustainable Partner, Lara Miller promotes environmentally conscious clothing in her collections. She avoids overseas production and pays attention to recycling. Highly influenced by the architectural and cultural landscape of Chicago, you can catch the  built and moving forms poping up in her pieces.

Acknowleding the relatively high prices for green fashion, she designs garments that could be worn in multiple ways. These cloths can be twisted, wrapped, and most distinguishably flipped upside down to reveal a whole new garment. So that you can make up three different sweaters from one. This also connects the garment to the choice of the wearer.

As for fabrics, she works a lot with the handloomed bamboo sweaters, incorporating some organic cotton with seaweed fabric.

Mark Liu’s Up Coming Collection: Singularity Point

August 27th, 2009 by dennis

mark lieu

Singularity Point, Mark Liu’s Winter 2010 collection, is inspired from the thought of a moment when a system becomes self of its own limitations and eventually  takes control of its destiny. Lieu applies this principle to the fashion. His innovations in textiles and tailoring , such as not using the sewing machine at all for some designs, brings about a new environmentally friendly collection, just like Zero Waste.

A forerunner of the Zero Waste Movement in fashion from London, Liu developed his own jigsaw-like technique that makes optimal use of cloth and prevents waste. Heavily detailed designs in Singularity Point take attention to eco-conscious cloth cuts.

Lessons from Singularity Point for your daily life:

  1. Can cut the frayed jeanes into jean shorts or open the legs and crotch at the seams and sew them into a short jean skirt, or even a bag pack (I tried it, it works well with all those pockets and everything.)
  2. Don’t dump your old shirt for a little stain. Hide it under buttons, ornamental fabric or lace, creating your own design with details.
  3. Is a shirt too ragged to wear anyway? Why not using it as a cleaning cloth, it won’t scratch your furniture and flooring.

a Greener Wardrobe in 4 steps

August 13th, 2009 by dennis

Diminishing natural resources, problems with waste management and environmentally unfriendly production methods boost public awareness for greener clothing. If you don’t know where to start, this four step guide for a greener wardroble can be helpful.

1. What do you have in there?

“I have nothing to wear..!” Sounds familiar? Lou Taylor, a Brighton-based ethical stylist says that 80 per cent of women only wear 20 per cent of their clothes. The rest is often consist of piles of long-forgotten fashion mistakes or wrong sizes.

Before everything else, it would be wise to  reconsider every piece, with different tops/bottoms, with accessories. If you need some inspiration check this girl’s blog where she posts a new outfit each day with the very same black dress for one year!

Then you should determine once and for ever those unhappy pieces that you would never ever wear again.

2. One man’s garbage is another’s treasure

Now that you are left with a pile of mismatched stuff, it should be the last thing to dump them in the container. You may look like a tomato in that red shirt but someone else wouldn’t. Offer them to your younger sister, cousin or friends. Get in groups and forums where people exchange used items, such as ReUse @ ecofuture.net. You can even organize a local event where everyone comes in with their  unwanted clothing and leaves with each other’s. You can donate your stuff to a charity so that they can be handed in to the needed.

3. Shopping – conscious, used, organic

Are you well informed of big chains using sweatshops or those engaged in environmentally unfriendly practices? There are two good web sources on ethical and eco-conscious consumption (www.ethicalconsumer.org and www.labourbehindthelabel) to have an idea.

Don’t  put extra pressure on the resources, try second hand shops and vintage stores first. In these places you are very likely to find some very interesting and unique items in high quality. You can also check eBay for second hand cloths.

The constant demand for cotton, which is extremely hard to grow, leads to fertilizers used in large amounts. In other words, it takes one-third pound of pesticides and fertilizers to produce just one cotton T-shirt. It’s now possible to buy attractive clothing made from 100% organic cotton -as well as hemp, and silk- from companies such as Patagonia (www.patagonia.com), Prana (www.prana.com), and Maggie’s (www.organicclothes.com).

You can also try different fabrics, such as bamboo which being the fastest growing plant on earth, doesn’t need  pesticides or insecticides. It is also anti bacterial  and good for sensitive skin.

Back to the uniform project example, consider quality over quantity, not to end up with new wrong choices.

4. Repair

Recently, buying a new one of almost anything is cheaper than getting it repaired. However, putting extra strain on environment in terms of waste management as well as resources, due to a little rip, is not a green option. Moreover, you wouldn’t believe how easy some of these thing to do yourself.