Podcast Ep. 75, SASS BROWN, QUESTIONING CLOTHING ETHICS

Podcast Ep. 75, SASS BROWN, QUESTIONING CLOTHING ETHICS

For many years, Sass taught at FIT in New York. She was the Founding Dean of the Dubai Institute of Design and Innovation. She has purple hair, is a dedicated thrifter and has her shoes made by hand. But actually, this is not an interview about a life in fashion...

In this conversation, we focus on how fashion shapes our collective image, and how and why we allow it to dictate culture, and often get it so wrong. Ethical fashion isn’t just about garment workers being treated right - it’s about the whole thing, including us: shaping culture in a responsible, respectful, empowering way. Not making women feel bad about themselves. Not plundering from other cultures without asking permission. Not perpetuating eating disorders. Not ignoring entire sections of society who need clothes too. Basically, not propping up a broken system that deserves to be rebuilt. That’s a lot of nots!

Podcast Ep. 74, DYNAMIC POWER DUO ROSARIO DAWSON & ABRIMA ERWIAH

Podcast Ep. 74, DYNAMIC POWER DUO ROSARIO DAWSON & ABRIMA ERWIAH

This episode is about purpose, co-creation and building a social enterprise with a friend. It's about fashion with a heart, and following your dreams.

Rosario Dawson and Abrima Erwiah are Studio 189, a social enterprise brand based between New York and Ghana that won the CFDA x Lexus Sustainable Fashion Initiative award last year.

The brand works in countries with valuable skills but little infrastructure and limited access to markets, to help build the creative economy of the African fashion industry.

You no doubt know Rosario for her film work - she was discovered aged 15 sitting on her New York stoop by Harmony Korine, who cast her in his cult hit, Kids.

Podcast Ep. 73, CLAIRE BERGKAMP -MEET STELLA MCCARTNEY'S SECRET SUSTAINABILITY WEAPON

Podcast Ep. 73, CLAIRE BERGKAMP -MEET STELLA MCCARTNEY'S SECRET SUSTAINABILITY WEAPON

You know the score - Stella McCartney does the eco things first. Whether it’s making all things green super-cool, proving non-leather accessories can compete with traditional animal leather in the luxury market, or bringing the circular fashion conversation mainstream, this fashion brand leads the way.

So who makes all this happen? There’s McCartney herself, of course - the designer is a visionary greenie. But no woman is an island. Claire Bergkamp, and her sustainability team, have her back.

Meet Stella McCartney’s Worldwide Sustainability & Innovation Director. A self-confessed fibre nut, Claire started out as a costume designer in LA before switching lanes to study sustainability in London. There, she found her calling.

Podcast Ep. 72, RONALD VAN DER KEMP - RETHINKING COUTURE

Podcast Ep. 72, RONALD VAN DER KEMP - RETHINKING COUTURE

VOGUE once called him a “high-end scavenger”. Meet Dutch designer Ronald Van Der Kemp - the "sustainable couturier" behind RVDK. Fans include Lady Gaga and Kate Moss, Emma Watson, Lena Dunham and Celine Dion.

While he was still in college, Ronald wrote a thesis on fashion and nature, and designed a collection using vintage materials. He then spent two decades working in luxury fashion for the likes of Barney's, Bill Blass, Guy Laroche and Celine.

Now he's come full circle. Today, brand RVDK - which shows at Paris couture week - focuses on sustainability, and uses reclaimed, vintage and archival fabric. Ronald describes his approach to couture as: “Dressing ageless strong personalities that expect exclusivity, originality and high quality.''

Podcast Ep. 71, SAVING THE PLANET WITH MOTHER OF PEARL'S AMY POWNEY

Podcast Ep. 71, SAVING THE PLANET WITH MOTHER OF PEARL'S AMY POWNEY

Change is possible

Mother of Pearl is a British sustainable luxury womenswear and accessories brand that celebrates individuality and authenticity. The brand was established in 2002 by stylist Maia Norman, then wife of artist Damien Hurst. Amy Powney joined as a paid intern fresh out of fashion school 13 years ago. Nine years later she became creative director.

Today it’s known for its dark florals, satin bows, polka dots, ruffles and outsized faux-pearl trims - you could never accuse Mother of Pearl of being homespun or beige. Amy’s putting the glamour and fun into sustainable style, and it’s winning her accolades. In 2017, Mother of Pearl (along with Palmer Harding) won the British Fashion Council/Vogue Fashion Fund Award.

Podcast Ep. 70, LONDON'S NEW GEN - BETHANY WILLIAMS, MATTHEW NEEDHAM, & PATRICK MCDOWELL

Podcast Ep. 70, LONDON'S NEW GEN - BETHANY WILLIAMS, MATTHEW NEEDHAM, & PATRICK MCDOWELL

Make way, it’s time for something new

Fashion schools everywhere are full of eco warriors and bright, brilliant kids who are determined to do fashion differently. London is the leader. Long known for its fashion creativity, this is the capital that produces the most vibrant student shows and earth-shaking emerging designers. The big international and Paris-based design houses look to London fashion schools like Central St Martins and London College of Fashion for their future stars - but many in this new generation are questioning the validity of the exisiting fashion system, and asking if they want to be part of it at all. Now is a time of reinvention - young designers will reimagine fashion and the way it works. The question is, how?

In this Episode, we’ll hear from 3 young London-based ones to watch: Bethany Williams, Matthew Needham and Patrick McDowell. Find out why they care about sustainability and how they apply it to their work, what they’re doing to combat fashion waste and redesign the whole system.

Podcast Ep. 69, ORSOLA DE CASTRO - QUEEN OF UPCYCLING

Podcast Ep. 69, ORSOLA DE CASTRO - QUEEN OF UPCYCLING

Revolution, baby

She is one of the warmest, most generous and knowledgable people working in sustainable fashion today. You probably know Orsola as the cofounder, with Carry Somers, of Fashion Revolution. But did you also know that she is the Queen Upcycling?

In the that 1990s, after crocheting around the holes in a much-loved old jumper that she couldn’t bear to part with although it was literally falling apart, Orsola founded the fashion label From Somewhere. Her designs used only discarded, unloved, unwanted materials and turned them into the opposite: treasured, loved, wanted, and highly covetable.

Podcast Ep. 68, LIVIA FIRTH, ECO AGE & THE GREEN CARPET

Podcast Ep. 68, LIVIA FIRTH, ECO AGE & THE GREEN CARPET

Watch out, unethical fashion! Your days are numbered

Livia Firth is the Creative Director of sustainability consultancy Eco-Age, and the founder of the Green Carpet Challenge and Green Carpet Fashion Awards. She is a UN Leader of Change, a founding member of Annie Lennox’s women’s advocacy group The Circle, and was a co-producer on Andrew Morgan’s ethical fashion documentary, The True Cost. Livia is also a warm and wonderful advocate for ethical and sustainable fashion, and an absolute treat to interview. We are so grateful to Livia for kicking off this, our brand sparkling new series 3 of the Wardrobe Crisis podcast.

Ep 67, TAMARA CINCIK, FASHION & POLITICS - BREXIT AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL AUDIT COMMITTEE

Ep 67, TAMARA CINCIK, FASHION & POLITICS - BREXIT AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL AUDIT COMMITTEE

From front row to front bench? Why not? It's time we stopped considering fashion as simply fluffy. The industry is a giant global employer with serious impacts on the environment, and yet it is not traditionally associated with being active in the political arena or central to government policy. Our guest this week, on the final Episode of Series 2, is Londoner Tamara Cincik, founder of the British policy organisation Fashion Roundtable, who is determined to change this.

Ep 66, TEATUM JONES ON POSITIVE FASHION, INCLUSIVITY & ACTIVISM

Ep 66, TEATUM JONES ON POSITIVE FASHION, INCLUSIVITY & ACTIVISM

Catherine Teatum and Rob Jones, are the London creative partners behind Teatum Jones - an inclusive, though-provoking label challenging fashion’s norms. What role can fashion play in empowering women and girls? How can we modernise fashion and make it way more inclusive? How do we smash the idea that you have to look and be a certain way to qualify as beautiful, stylish, in fashion? How come fashion ignores disability - and keeps on getting away with it? Why do designers have a responsibility in this area, and how can they maximise their positive impact?