UK designer rejects 'fast fashion' to protect planet

UK designer rejects 'fast fashion' to protect planet

Designer Phoebe English works with offcuts and discarded fabrics
Designer Phoebe English works with offcuts and discarded fabrics. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

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Driven by a passion to protect the planet, Phoebe English hasn't bought a centimetre of fabric or a single plastic button for her collection at London Fashion Week.

The fashion industry is one of the most polluting, accounting for up to 10 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, according to World Bank estimates.

"Fast fashion", where clothes are bought for a few dollars and then discarded after a few wears, leads to a high volume of waste, which often ends up in illegal landfills in the Global South.

It's an issue that preoccupies English, a 37-year-old designer who graduated from London's prestigious Central Saint Martins arts college in 2010.

"We are producing too much too quickly, in quite an unnecessary way, and we need to really think about it," she told AFP.

"Is that something that can actually continue with the planetary boundaries that we have?"

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Her work is a way of fighting back against excess in the fashion industry
Her work is a way of fighting back against excess in the fashion industry. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

Like millions of people, she admits to a degree of "eco-anxiety" that at first glance is difficult to reconcile with her profession.

But it has prompted her to take radical action: a blouse made from bed linen salvaged from a luxury hotel is an item typical of her collection.

She found the fabric for a crepe blouse in a wedding dress store.

"We spend the year collecting textile waste, so that might be in the form of off-cuts from other businesses," she explained.

Several wedding dress manufacturers send her scraps of fabric "that usually just go in the rubbish".

The non-uniform and often small nature of the off-cuts makes the work transforming them into garments to wear "quite technical and complicated", she added.

English has slowed down the amount she can create for shows like London Fashion Week
English has slowed down the amount she can create for shows like London Fashion Week. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

Given the self-imposed constraints focusing on slow and sustainable clothes, she only presents one collection per year at fashion week, which starts on Friday, while most designers present at least two.

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"We can't do it at the same speed that potentially other companies can," she added.

Afterlife

"What we're aiming for is to work in less damaging ways," she said.

Her environmentally friendly collections have won fans across the world
Her environmentally friendly collections have won fans across the world. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

"We don't use plastic components in our clothes. Our buttons are corozo nut or milk casein, both natural materials, and we use organic cotton sewing thread where possible."

English thinks about the afterlife of the garment so that it is easy to sew and repair once worn and is biodegradable, should it end up being disposed of in a natural environment.

The collection is monochrome and refined: the clothes are either black or white with no prints or embroidery.

"We work with the shape and the form and the cutting and the draping, rather than necessarily the decoration," she explained.

Many pieces are also gender neutral.

'Fast fashion' creates a high volume of waste, much of which is often shipped to countries in the Global South
'Fast fashion' creates a high volume of waste, much of which is often shipped to countries in the Global South. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

Everything is done with a small team in her east London studio, or outsourced elsewhere in England.

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It is a "very niche company", she said.

English has sold her creations in Japan, the United States and several locations in Europe and has built a loyal clientèle, who order items directly from her on the internet.

Among her clients are many artists and people curious about her approach.

While most fashion brands now say they are acting to protect the environment, many are accused of "greenwashing".

"There's quite a lot of misinformation," said English, calling for "clear legislation to help mitigate some of the damaging practices".

The British Fashion Council, which organises London Fashion Week, is looking to clean up the sector
The British Fashion Council, which organises London Fashion Week, is looking to clean up the sector. Photo: Daniel LEAL / AFP
Source: AFP

The British Fashion Council, which organises fashion week, has just announced a joint programme with the British textile industry to clean up the sector.

They will attempt to reduce waste and overproduction of clothing and work to support the UK's net-zero strategy and wider climate targets.

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Source: AFP

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