Cop26: Meet nine fashion designers making real change

From upcycling to educating, Fashion Open Studio has enlisted nine pioneering designers for a series of online workshops to mark the United Nation Climate Change Conference

Is it actually possible to reduce the fashion industry’s impact on the environment? Nine pioneering designers from five continents are showing that it is. Masterminding a series of solutions to some of the challenges facing their own communities, they demonstrate what we can learn from local indigenous knowledge and how to work within the limits of our natural resources.

In the lead up to Cop26, the designers were asked to respond to the climate change talks’ themes of adaptation, resilience and nature for a series of online workshops created by Fashion Open Studio (the initiative set up by Fashion Revolution) in partnership with the British Council. If you happen to be in Glasgow between November 4 to 11, you can take part in workshop events around the city, or to watch previous events and find out about upcoming workshops online, check out fashionopenstudio.com/events. In the meantime, here are the nine names to know:

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How to wear a sweater dress | Jess Cartner-Morley

For those of us trying to break free of our lockdown loungewear, there is no better autumn outfit

Every time I wear a sweater dress I wonder why I ever wear anything else. There is actually no better autumn outfit. The judge’s decision is final and she will be taking no further questions at this time. In a sweater dress I feel slightly mysterious, possibly a little bit French. Which is miraculous, since I have absolutely zero mystique and am not remotely French. Nonetheless, in a sweater dress I somehow feel as if I might be on my way to eat a chic solo dinner while reading a novel in a neighbourhood bistro, before strolling home, probably shoulder-robing a trench coat, under softly glowing streetlights. I fancy myself the kind of person who makes occasional pithy contributions to conversation, rather than the witterer-on that I really am. The type of woman who has excellent posture and a collection of interesting ceramics.

But most of all, I feel really comfy. As comfy as I do in a tracksuit – more, in fact. Is it too soon to speak ill of the tracksuit – the nun’s habit of lockdown? It’s beginning to feel like a hangover from too much time at home. Stockholm syndrome, the fashion edition.

It still feels vaguely blasphemous to raise the point that loungewear is not exactly an aesthetic delight, except perhaps on Hailey Bieber, but perhaps it is time to gently break free. To think for ourselves again even, rather than wearing the same thing as everyone else on your Zoom screen. Comfort is paramount, yes, but it isn’t just about an elasticated waist. I’d hazard a guess that I am not alone among grown women in that I feel more confident – and as a result more relaxed – in a sweater dress than in a tracksuit.

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Forget fast fashion – here are the six key trends you need for 2021

Join the slow lane in these relaxed looks that will see you through spring, summer and beyond

Goodbye fast fashion, hello slow fashion. The age of the flash-in-the-pan trend is over; the lifespan of the trends that matter is now counted in years, not months.
To put this in broadsheet language, slow fashion is fashion’s third way. No need to make a stark choice between buying into the fast-fashion cycle (consumerist horror show, but jazzy) and swearing off fashion altogether (admirable, but a bit joyless). Slow fashion charts a different course. It is about looking agreeably current, rather than up-to-the-minute. It is about nailing the hemline or the dress shape that defines the decade, rather than the season. It keeps one eye on fashion, but its feet on the ground, remembering that clothes are not disposable.

This is an exciting moment. You know that thing when something really complicated goes wrong, and the first thing you do is turn it off and then on again? And sometimes, it works? Well, that’s basically what we’ve done to fashion. It’s had a reset. Fashion was on pause for the pandemic, but now it is back on – and it’s better than it was before.

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