Title: Sustainable Fashion Forum Location: Hong Kong Link out: Click here Description:
“Sustainable Fashion Forum (SFF) is an interactive half-day event for the fashion industry to come together and discuss a like-minded concern: The Sustainability of Fashion. The forum will address issues such as ethical sourcing, eco-friendliness, moving beyond green washing, what best practice means today, profitability and innovation.”
The Sustainable Fashion Forum is supported by Worldwide Responsible Accredited Production (WRAP).
Session 1: What is Sustainable Fashion?
Session 2: Is Sustainable Fashion Profitable?
Session 3: Who is Sustainable Fashion?
For more information on sessions and panellists, and to register online, click here.
Don’t forget! FEI will be participating in Ethical Fashion Show Paris, here is the info, straight off the FEI bulletin:
Ethical Fashion Show Paris: Education For Sustainable Fashion/ Atelier “Education pour une Mode Durable”
Fashioning an Ethical Industry will be hosting a seminar on Education for Sustainable Fashion at the Ethical Fashion Show in Paris from 1pm to 3:30pm on Sunday October 4th 2009. The event will take place at Tapis Rouge: 67, rue du fg St Martin 75010 Paris. The event is aimed at fashion tutors and students but everyone is welcome. The event will be in both French and English.
Fashioning an Ethical Industry propose un atelier intitulé Education pour une Mode Durable à l’Ethical Fashion Show de Paris le dimanche 4 octobre de 13h à 15h30. Cet atelier aura lieu au Tapis Rouge, 67 rue du Faubourg St Martin, 75010 Paris. Il s’adresse aux enseignants et aux étudiants de la mode ainsi qu’au public. Les interventions seront accessibles en français et en anglais.
The programme
1.00pm: Shopping ethically – Nayla Ajaltouni, Collectif de L’Ethique sur L’Etiquette, France: www.ethique-sur-etiquette.org
1.30pm: Ethics in education – Liz Parker, joint project coordinator, Fashioning an Ethical Industry, UK: www.fashioninganethicalindustry.org
2.00pm: Ethical fashion from design to manufacture – Fair Labor Association / University of Delaware, USA: www.ethicalfashionproject.wordpress.com
2.30pm: Ethical fashion management – Natalie Ruelle, Institut Français de la Mode (IFM) , France. www.ifm-paris.com
3.00pm:Marketing ethics in an uncertain economy – Emmanual Walliser, Numanu – Label of Love, France: www.numanu.com
Tickets are available from: www.ethicalfashionshow.com
Image via Centre for Sustainable Fashion, London College of Fashion
“Fashioning the Future brings together a global community of creative thinkers and doers, designers, innovators and entrepreneurs ready to offer the fashion industry opportunities for the future.
Founded in 2008, Fashioning the Future has been developed to include a wider range of disciplines, now with seven separate awards, celebrating and promoting a generation of emerging talent for the fashion industry of the future.
The possibilities for our future lie in the ingenuity of our creative minds. The competition is the leading international platform for celebrating innovation in sustainable fashion design, development and communication and we hope students and recent graduates from across the global fashion industry are inspired and excited to contribute through their work.
The underlying issue of consumption, the theme for the 2008 awards, will continue to be a crucial issue to fashion and its sustainability. Aligned to this, the theme for 2009 is Water, and there is a specific cross-discipline award focusing on this.”
Title: A Better World by Design Location: Providence, RI Link out: Click here Description: “A Better World by Design brings a global community of innovators to Providence, Rhode Island, to reach across disciplines and unite under a common goal. Presenters share engaging stories, workshops teach creative skills, and discussions reframe perspectives. A Better World by Design is an immersive experience that deepens our understanding of the power of design, technology, and enterprise to reshape our communities and sustain our environment.”
If you are interested in the inner workings of the world of fashion, these movies will introduce you to some influential players: Valentino, Anna Wintour and Coco Chanel, before Chanel. These films will no doubt offer insight into the way in which certain design decisions, made by only a few influential individuals, have impacted the entire industry.
What are the negative/positive consequences of such influential decisions?
Fashioning an Ethical Industry International Conference: Fast Forward will take place on the 2nd and 3rd March 2010. It will bring together educators, industry experts, academics and selected students to explore how fashion can be taught to inspire responsibility for the rights of the workers making our clothes.
Alongside our set programme of speakers with expertise in the industry, we will provide the opportunity for the presentation of academic research papers and for students to present their project or dissertation work at the conference.
Academic/Research Papers Papers are welcomed that address the following or related themes:
Social responsibility in the garment industry (with an emphasis on garment workers’ rights)
Teaching ethics within fashion education
Approaches to education for sustainable development relevant to fashion education
Students are invited to apply for the opportunity to showcase their project, design or dissertation work which addresses social responsibility in the garment industry. If you are a tutor please encourage your students to make a submission.
Academics and students interested in participating in this event should submit an abstract by 30th October 2009 of 500‐700 words to liz _at_ fashioninganethicalindustry.org (replace _at_ with@). For more information on submitting papers please see the attached PDF.
Thanks to Ethical Style for letting us know about Canadian designer Tal Dehtiar’s new shoe line, Oliberté. Oliberté claims to be the first footwear company to make urban shoes exclusively in Africa – based on Fairtrade principles. The shoes are made from locally sourced materials (leather and rubber) in West Africa (starting in January). Speaking on the issue of poverty in the continent, Dehtiar argues that “the only real way to alleviate poverty on this beautiful continent is to build a middle class that includes fair paying jobs.”
It will be interesting to see how this line develops. As of yet, there are no real details on the Fairtrade and/or environmental nature of its supply chain (i.e. wages or factory conditions- tanning leather is often associated with pretty nasty chemicals, as well as the harsh glues that may be used in assembly, etc.), as the company is not yet certified Fairtrade. I expect that more information on production will be made available on the website soon: Treehugger has reported that “[t]he company is working in partnership with factories to improve their environmental footprint. As they say: ‘we still have a long way to go, but we will continue to do all we can improve our materials, our production and our shoes.’ Oliberte will be supporting local training in the communities where they work.” Treehugger also reports that Oliberté is “consulting with the tanneries to meet environmental standards.” Thus, stay tuned for updates from this Canadian company.
One urban footwear company that has seemingly managed to maintain it’s foothold in Fairtrade manufacturing is Veja.
If you aren’t already familiar with Veja, be sure to check them out straight away. Asking the question “Is another world possible?” Veja uses and supports wild latex production in the Amazonia to fight against deforestation:
Veja soles are made of natural latex coming straight from the Amazon Forest in the Chico Mendes reserve. The Amazon is the only place on earth where wild rubber trees are to be found […] Their activity, which does not require putting down any tree, is a great way to preserve the world’s largest forest. Natural rubber is renewable and biodegradable, as opposed to synthetic rubber or plastic, which is produced by using fossil and non-renewable materials.
Veja also uses organic cotton, supports family agriculture and local cooperatives and uses ecological leather rather than chrome tanned leather (Veja has defined ecological leather as “chrome-free leather tanned with organic compounds only”). For more up-to date information on the happenings over at Veja, be sure to follow their blog.
Sidebar: Veja has just launched its first line of ethical bags, four years after introducing its trainers.
About these bags: organic cotton and leather tanned without chromium.
Alain Berteau Designworks has developed an interesting alternative to traditional metal/plastic/wood hangers in its commitment to pursue innovative design solutions within the context of ecology.
Sometimes design is about new behavior, not new product. Thinking beyond recycling, why waste energy shaping wood when nature is already doing such a good job? Sold by sets of 5, these hanger hooks require you take a walk in a natural environment to complete the object with some fallen branches.
The project was designed for the brussels based non-profit organisation Les Petits Riens, which provides social reinsertion via the collecting and selling of second-hand clothes and used furniture.