As New York Fashion Week rolls around again, it’s the perfect time to listen to this interview with Hillary Taymour, founder of the much-talked-about NYC label Collina Strada. This is a candid conversation about going your own way, finding joy on creativity, and the frustrations of trying to be a sustainable fashion designer inside an unsustainable system.
Ep 175 "Craft connects us" - Samorn Sanixay on Weaving, Multiculturalism & What We Have in Common
On the surface, this is the story of Samorn Sanixay’s epic adventure to map Australia through a colour study of its natural eucalyptus dyes. Last year, she set out to do just that, spending a year travelling around the country collecting leaves from these wonderfully diverse trees wherever she went.
But that's just the starting point of this feel-good interview with the natural dyes expert and co-founder of artisanal weaving studio Eastern Weft in Vientiane.
Ep 174 Edward Hertzman - Is it Time for a Power Shift Between Fashion Brands and Suppliers?
Forget Vogue. Sourcing Journal is required reading of you really want to know how the business of fashion works. This week on the Wardrobe Crisis podcast, host Clare Press quizzes fashion industry insider, and former sourcing professional Edward Hertzman on what it would take to fix fashion's supply chains - and move the sustainability agenda beyond talk.
Ep 173, Talking Self-Care, Fashion Burn-Out and Grind Culture with Georgina Johnson
What does it mean to thrive in your career? How do you define success? Is that the same way that society, or your industry, defines it? Chances are there’s a disconnect. Because capitalism has been telling us for so long that it’s all about the hustle and the speedy output, that's become the dominant narrative. It's time you set your own pace. Fashion has a pretty terrible record on this, says Georgina Johnson, but it doesn't have to be this way. This inviting interview with the author of The Slow Grind is full of wise insights and practical inspiration.
Ep 172 Fashion Legend - Delightfully Bonkers Jewellery Maker Andrew Logan's Life in Colour
Ep 171, Wait, Seaweed Can Do, WHAT? Sam Elsom's Climate Gamechanger
According to UNEP, methane has accounted for roughly 30% of global warming since pre-industrial times and is proliferating faster than at any other time since record keeping began in the 1980s. While it hangs around in the atmosphere for less time than carbon does, while it is here, it's more potent. Where does it come from? Livestock emissions account for about a third of human-caused methane emissions. And yes, there's a fashion connection thanks to leather and wool. What if feeding livestock a certain type of seaweed could help? It can! Meet Sam Elsom, the Aussie behind SeaForest - an environmental tech company set up to tackle climate change by the power of seaweed.
Ep 170, Down on the Farm - A Yarn with a Wise, Wonderful Woolgrower Determined to Protect Native Grasslands
We hear a lot about product, clothes, and brands in fashion. Thankfully, we’re now starting to hear more about the makers, garment workers and skilled artisans behind the manufacturing scenes. But we still hear very little from the people and processes behind fashion’s raw materials. This week, we’re looking at wool, with a lovely interview with Tasmanian woolgrower Simon Cameron, of Kingston - who has been working with M.J. Bale on single origin suiting, and now - climate neutral wool.
EP 169 When Net-a-Porter met The Prince's Foundation at Dumfries
The race offshore hollowed out the fashion and textile industries in much of Europe, the US and Australia. But if you happen to live there, chances are you've got amazing fashion skills on your doorstep but you just don't realise. While much of the infrastructure has disappeared, the talent is still there. And still coming through. When Yoox-Net-A-Porter execs visited Dumfries House, Scotland to see how The Prince’s Foundation is working to inspire and upskill young people in the textiles area, they saw an opportunity: to support fashion graduates in luxury, small-batch production and produce a very special collection in the process. They called it the Modern Artisan project.
Ep 168, Vin and Omi Are the UK's Most Interesting Fashion Designers - and they Have Nothing to Sell You But Ideas
More exclusive than Chanel - because they barely produce anything you can buy? An anti-establishment fashion duo that works with royalty? Why not? Vin + Omi rewrite all the rules. They call themselves ideologists. They're fabric inventors, creative thinkers and system-challengers. Now also feature film-makers. Come have lunch with Clare and these two wonderfully weird and welcoming waste warriors.
Ep 167, Back to Nature - Plant Dyes at Chelsea Flower Show
Fancy wearing a dress coloured sunny yellow by daffodils or a shirt dyed blue with woad? This week we're talking natural dyes and the magic of textiles derived from plants for a special episode produced with Fashion Revolution and guest-hosted by Carry Somers. Carry's talking with garden designer Lottie Delamain and natural dyes expert Kate Turnbull. Together, they've created a garden for Chelsea Flower Show "to inspire visitors to re-imagine the link between what we can grow and what we wear, showcasing creative possibilities and innovative thinking around how we can use our resources to create more sustainable solutions."