Wardrobe Crisis

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Ep 60, DILYS WILLIAMS, EDUCATION and the CENTRE FOR SUSTAINABLE FASHION

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EPISODE 60 FEATURES DILYS WILLIAMS

The Centre for Sustainable Fashion at London College of Fashion is a leading institution and influence in the space. Meet its founder, academic, designer, educator and all-round sustainable fashion legend Dilys Williams.

This is a lively and thought-provoking discussion about how we might totally redesign the way the current fashion system works. We talk about the role of the designer, the role of fashion in all our lives and how commerce fits in. We discuss the importance of being critical thinkers, fashion rebels and outspoken advocates for justice.

We touch on DIY, Margaret Thatcher, The Clash, and finding your fashion identity, but also big stuff continuing the conversation that’s been running through this series of the podcast about how we stand with nature, and what our obligations are to it. How do we define our struggle for sustainability?

Professor Dilys Williams is Director of Centre for Sustainable Fashion, a University of the Arts Research Centre based at London College of Fashion. A former womenswear designer for Katharine Hamnett, Liberty and Whistles, she’s also an author, a member of the Observer Ethical Awards judging panel, and co-secretariat to the House of Lords All Party Parliamentary Group on Fashion, Sustainability and Ethics - for more on this, check out Episode 53 with Baroness Lola Young.

Inspiring the next generation of fashion change-makers at the Copenhagen Fashion Summit’s Youth Summit

WHAT WE TALK ABOUT…

Pic via ReMake Our World.

WEARING YOUR VALUES. “We all do it,” says Dilys, “even if we don’t realise it.” How do you express your values through your clothes? “We all wear our values, whether explicitly or implicitly. What we wear says something about the time we live in, it says something about where we’re from [and] the things that resonate with us.”

When we recorded this interview, Dilys was wearing a white cotton poplin skirt and a navy jumper, something of a uniform for her - classic white, basic navy, maybe a bit of a fisherman’s jumper with jeans.

A lot of fashion people swear by their “uniform” - think about Grace Coddington in navy sweaters and pants, or Anna Wintour in sleeveless fit-and-flare dresses & dark sunglasses. Before the street style circus took over, Clare remembers when pretty much everyone at a fashion show would be wearing head-to-toe black. Heck, some still do…

Always in VOGUE: Tonne Goodman, Grace Coddington & Virginia Smith doing the black thing at a Ralph Lauren show, 2018

Here’s ex BRITISH VOGUE ed, Alexandra Schulman on our enduring obsession with the colour: “You have to spend only a few days at the international fashion shows to go off black. While the catwalks are covered in wild and fantastic colour and fabric, the audience are likely to be wearing all kinds of expensive black that is certainly chic and fashionable, but looks as if everyone has turned up in school uniform. Sometimes, though, black clothes are like a sartorial painkiller: they simply remove the pressure and get you through the day.”

JOHN SMEDLEY is a British knitwear company. Their factory has been at Lea Mills, Derbyshire for 230 years. Classic, reassuringly expensive but also cool - the Beatles wore John Smedley. Paul Smith, Vivienne Westwood and Katherine Hamnett produced knitwear with John Smedley. Clare’s mum sold the brand in her boutique. Read about their approach to sustainability here and here.

KATHERINE HAMNETT is the bee’s knees. She’s also trying to save the world’s bee’s. Katherine Hamnett is Wardrobe Crisis’s hero. Remember her early slogan tees? From CHOOSE LIFE to STOP ACID RAIN, get the skinny, here. Want to learn more about Hamnett and her battle for organic cotton? There’s a whole chapter of Wardrobe Crisis, How we went from Sunday Best to Fast Fashion, dedicated to this, featuring an in-depth interview with her. Buy the ebook here.

“FASHION HAS ALWAYS BEEN ABOUT CHANGE BUT IT HASN’T ALWAYS BEEN ABOUT CHUCKING CLOTHES AWAY.” - DILYS WILLIAMS 

BUYCOTTING. The opposite of a boycott: deliberately purchasing a company's or a country's products in support of their policies, or to counter a boycott.

LABOUR BEHIND THE LABEL’s campaign, Fashioning an Ethical Industry, was designed to encourage students to think about fashion supply chain issues. It was funded by the EU, and ran from 2008 to 2010. Read about it here.

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”- Nelson Mandela

Lucy Siegle is the British journalist who pioneered writing about sustainability for the Guardian in the 2000s. She is the author of To Die For, Is Fashion Wearing Out the World. Her new book is about plastic pollution.

Professor Frances Korner is the Head of College and Pro-Vice Chancellor of UAL.

MICHELLE LOWE HOLDER is a British designer of “eco-hybrid hand-crafted accessories - from cuffs & colliers to bags & pouches. Unexpected varieties of materials are worked together to create stand-out pieces. From tulle to leather scraps, vintage bugle beads, embroidered ribbons or state of the art stone plating - they are all hand woven / folded / repeated / twisted or formed to create each unique seasonal concept and design.”

CHRISTOPHER RAEBURN is one of our favourite sustainable fashion designers. He makes this fab jacket (below). He makes our day. Listen to him on Episode 29, here.

The NIKE “MAKING” APP is an open-source tool that ranks materials used in apparel, based on four environmental impact areas: water, chemistry, energy and waste. The idea? To help designers and product creators make informed decisions about the environmental impacts of the materials they choose.  More info here.

BURNOUT. Clare mentions Gods & Monsters, Dana Thomas’s brilliant book about Alexander McQueen and John Galliano. In it, Thomas reveals that at his height Galliano was designing 32 collections for his own label and for Dior. Too much.

Dilys says the pressure of pace remains a huge problem for the industry. As she points out, we need space to create and come up with ideas. “I do believe in the ingenuity of human nature, where at some point, however much technology allows us to keep speeding up, we will choose not to. We will choose to switch off and slow down.” We need, she says, to look at more carefully at wellbeing in fashion.

PINNING OUR HOPES ON A FUTURE ON ANOTHER PLANET. Infinite growth on a finite planet is not simply not possible, despite the lies we’re fed to the contrary. In 2013, speaking to the Royal Geographical Society, David Attenborough noted that one of the biggest threats to the natural world was overpopulation, and improving women's rights around the world was the only effective way to bring birth rates down. "I have little doubt that if we have the capacity to limit our birth rate, then we should consider doing that," he said. "We have a finite environment – the planet. Anyone who thinks that you can have infinite growth in a finite environment is either a madman or an economist.” Via the Guardian.

And yet we too often fall back on the fallacy of JUST IN TIME… surely, like in the movies, some saviour will swoop in and rescue humanity at the 11th hour. Just as climate change looks set to completely wreck our home, Richard Branson or Bill Gates, with their pots of money, will make it possible to invent a machine to draw carbon out of the atmosphere…Right? Surely? And if not, we can always move to Mars…

The STOCKHOLM RESILIENCE CENTRE is internationally recognised for its trans-disciplinary research. It advances the understanding of complex social-ecological systems and generates new insights and development to improve ecosystem management practices and long-term sustainability. Find out more, here.

Just a gratuitous picture of Roxy Music’s Bryan Ferry. Just because.

The British ART SCHOOL tradition. They influenced everyone from Malcom McLaren to Damien Hirst - Jonathan Jones argues that art schools are the engines of our counterculture, in this excellent piece for the Observer. “The peculiar world of the art school is at the heart of our culture. The more you look at recent British cultural history, the more it seems to have been mapped out over coffee in the cafeteria of some art college, argued over and fought for between students and teachers with goatee beards. This is not just about art: it is about a great tradition of subversion.You can construct a family tree of British artists and their pupils since the early 1960s whose branches extend not just into art but into pop music, not just to Damien Hirst but to Pete Townshend, Bryan Ferry and the Sex Pistols' manager Malcolm McLaren. You can see analogies between McLaren giving up his Goldsmiths degree with an unfinished thesis on 'the psychogeography of Oxford Street' to found his shop Sex, and the late 60s rebellion at St.Martin's out of which British conceptual art was born. You can imagine the birthpangs of punk in students who rebelled against their polo-neck-wearing teachers.” Read the rest here.

Dilys was an advisor for the V&A’s fantastic Fashioned From Nature exhibition at the V&A. (Missed it? Listen to Episode 44 about the exhibition, with head curator Edwina Ehrman here .) As part of the show, Dilys curated the interactive installations ‘Fashion Now’ and ‘Fashion Futures 2030’  - bringing in students to create elements, art pieces and pathways through the visual journey.


“We all wear clothes, but we’re also all designers. Design is, by definition, just about making something better than it was - whether it’s making your life better, making something fit better, making your house better - we all use design in our lives.” - Dilys Williams

Design academic NIGEL CROSS talks about design being an innate capability of being human. Whether you professionalise that or not, says Dilys, is up to you.

WHAT DOES FASHION MEAN? “Fashion being able to express yourself for yourself and with others, it connect you,” says Dilys. “We’re a social species, what we wear is part of having a conversation, visually. It gives us a sense of belonging, and also distinction. It’s from the inside out and the outside in.”

THE CLASH were an iconic British new wave punk band. But you knew that already, didn’t you?

The YOUTH FASHION SUMMIT ties in with the Copenhagen Fashion Summit proper, in partnership with the United Nations Global Compact. The idea is to challenge fashion students, admitted from all over the world, to create a framework for the industry on how to reach two of the Sustainable Development Goals.

In 2018, three students from RMIT in Melbourne took part: Amanda Morglund, a final year Bachelor of Fashion student, whose honours research project focused on the intersection of mycology and fashion design. Yep, mushrooms. Remember her name. Julia English, a final year student from Bachelor of Fashion, focused on examining the way we engage with and value our clothes. Lisa Kjerulf, a final year Masters student, is now working for the Australian Fashion Council. Hey Lisa.

Clare with RMIT students Lisa, Julia and Amanda in Copenhagen

THANK YOU FOR JOINING THE WARDROBE CRISIS CONVERSATION. WE'LL HAVE A NEW EPISODE FOR YOU EVERY WEDNESDAY. CAN YOU HELP US SPREAD THE WORD? WE'D LOVE YOU TO TELL YOUR FRIENDS & LEAVE A REVIEW.

Until next time,

Clare x