Podcast 90, MAKE DENIM CIRCULAR

Podcast 90, MAKE DENIM CIRCULAR

C is for collaborate

Denim is ubiquitous. According to British anthropologists Daniel Miller and Sophie Woodward, we wear jeans on average 3.5 days a week. In 2017, the global jeans market was worth USD $57 billion. Almost 2 billion pairs were sold around the world in the same year. That is a lot of jeans…

It’s also a lot of jeans waste.

According to The New Textiles Economy report, less than 1% of used clothing is recycled into new clothing. We’re landfilling and incinerating discarded, unloved clothes at increasing rates, while at the same time decreasing clothing use over time.

Podcast 89, KATE FLETCHER, CRAFT OF USE

Podcast 89, KATE FLETCHER, CRAFT OF USE

Fashion life after shopping

By 2030, we keep going as we are, the fashion industry will manufacture 102 million tons of clothes and shoes. For comparison, that's the weight equivalent of half million blue whales!

Growth is not something we like to question in the fashion industry (or indeed any industry). In our capitalist system, commercial success is measured by growth. But, how can we support infinite growth on a finite planet?

Podcast 88, WILSON ORYEMA, POETRY AND CONSUMERISM

Podcast 88, WILSON ORYEMA, POETRY AND CONSUMERISM

Words and pictures

Twenty-five-old British poet, filmmaker and activist Wilson Oryema describes himself as “a semi-retired model”. He was scouted on his lunch break when he was working a London office job, and walked his first Paris show for Margiela in 2015. He went on to appear in ads for Calvin Klein Underwear and Hugo Boss .

His first book of poetry, titled Wait, explores consumerism, contemporary culture and waste. It sprang from an art show he held in a London gallery, after he interned for his photographer friend Harley Weir.

Podcast 87, Understanding the SDGS with Togetherband founder CAMERON SAUL

Podcast 87,  Understanding the SDGS with Togetherband founder CAMERON SAUL

What’s your favourite Global Goal? Have you even heard of them, otherwise known as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)? Don’t feel bad if you haven’t because while these 17 goals, created by the United Nations as a roadmap for a sustainable future, are super important - they are not as well-known as they should be. Some countries are doing great work in advancing them. Others, including Australia, have a pretty ordinary record on progress so far. In this interview with Togetherband founder Cameron Saul, we discuss why these goals are for all of us, and how we can work together to make them a reality.

Podcast 86, JENNIFER BOYLAN, CLOTHES DON'T MAKE THE WOMAN

Podcast 86, JENNIFER BOYLAN, CLOTHES DON'T MAKE THE WOMAN

What’s fashion got to do with finding yourself?

This week’s interview was recorded at the Dark + Dangerous Thoughts symposium at Dark Mofo in Hobart. It’s with brilliant writer and transwoman, Professor Jennifer Finney Boylan - author of She’s Not There, A Life in Two Genders.

Jenny is a New York Times columnist, author and activist. She serves on the Board of Trustees of PEN America, the writer’s association. She is a former co-chair of GLAAD’s board of directors and member of the Board of Trustees of the Kinsey Institute for Research on Sex, Gender, and Reproduction. On TV, she advised on and appears in I Am Cait - the story of Caitlin Jenner’s transition. But that’s nothing! Jennifer Boylan’s first big TV moment was on Oprah, and you’re going to hear all about that.

Podcast 85, MICHAEL KOBORI - HOW SUSTAINABLE IS LEVI'S?

Podcast 85, MICHAEL KOBORI - HOW SUSTAINABLE IS LEVI'S?

Jeans genius

Think of a jeans brand. I bet it’s Levi’s. There of course hundreds, maybe thousands of denim companies today. Denim has been thoroughly disrupted. But the original was Levi’s…

The company is also well-known for promoting progressive causes. They were one of the earliest private sector institutions to support LGBTQ advocacy, and spoke out against the presidency of Donald Trump by donating $1 million to support immigration and LGBTQ rights. In 2018, CEO Chip Bergh published an Op-ed in Fortune magazine endorsing gun control.

But how sustainable is Levi’s? This week, we hear from Levi’s Vice-President of Sustainability, MICHAEL KOBORI. He started out in human rights, and joined Levi’s in 1995. Over the years, he has seen the conversation move from sweatshops and corporate social responsibility (CSR) to sustainable materials, life cycle assessments and worker wellbeing.

Podcast 84, KATHARINE HAMNETT, REBEL FASHION FORCE

Podcast 84, KATHARINE HAMNETT, REBEL FASHION FORCE

At the end of the loadsa-money ‘80s, the Buddhist concept of right livelihood was hardly the thing inspiring most fashion designers. But that’s when our guest this week, at the height of her fame and fashion success while her Katharine Hamnett brand was stocked in 700 stores in 40 countries, decided to question the whole system.

You’re going to hear all about Katharine’s passion to change fashion, and to fight for the environment, her glitzy early years as a designer, and what motivates her to be change agent today. You get to hear her tell the story of how she ambushed Margaret Thatcher in 1984 with her anti-nuclear missiles T-shirt. That story is gold.

Podcast 83, BANDANA TEWARI - WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM GANDHI ABOUT MINDFUL FASHION?

Podcast 83, BANDANA TEWARI - WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM GANDHI ABOUT MINDFUL FASHION?

Journalist Bandana Tewari was formerly Vogue India’s fashion features director then the magazine’s Editor-at-Large. She now writes for Business of Fashion, and speaks globally on India’s rich fashion craft tradition. She spent many years in Mumbai at the epicentre of Indian fashion, where she presented Indian first pop culture fashion TV show. Recently, she moved to Bali. Bandana is a special adviser to Global Fashion Agenda, a judge for the H&M Foundation’s Global Change Award, and is an awesome human, we are sure you will agree.