草莓传媒

Sustaining fashion: New exhibit shows clean take on dirty industry

DC's Textile Museum showcases a cleaner side of a dirty industry (草莓传媒's Rachel Nania )

WASHINGTON When you think about major sources of pollution, what comes to mind? Transportation? Agricultural runoff? Energy production?

Believe it or not, one of the dirtiest things for the planet is the clean shirt on your back. The textile industry is the in the world, just behind oil.

鈥淭here鈥檚 waste at every step of the textile manufacturing process,鈥 said Camille Ann Brewer, curator of contemporary art at the .

鈥淵arn production, weaving, the cutting out of patterns, irregulars that are tossed aside that don鈥檛 quite meet quality control 鈥 all of this textile cloth ends up somewhere, and where does it end up? In the landfill.鈥

On top of waste generated from production is the growing popularity of fast fashion, or trendy articles and accessories that are mass produced often in sweatshops and made inexpensive to consumers.

鈥淪ince [the year] 2000, our garment consumption has doubled,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淵oung women are going out, buying something that鈥檚 inexpensive, that you can wear two or three times, and then it falls apart and is discarded.鈥

However, not everything in the world of runway glamour is gloomy. More designers are drumming up innovative ways to scrub the fashion industry of its dirty image, and the works of three such pioneers are on display at The Textile Museum through Jan. 7, 2018.

The exhibit 鈥溾 showcases sustainable production methods from designers Luisa Cevese, Reiko Sudo and Christina Kim.

The fashion industry is the second largest polluter in the world, behind oil. A new exhibit at the George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum shows how some designers are working to make style more sustainable. (草莓传媒/Rachel Nania)
Designer Reiko Sudo centers her approach around using the often-discarded kibiso (the outermost layer of the silk cocoon that protects the silk fiber), which she spins into a fine yarn that can be machine woven. (草莓传媒/Rachel Nania)
Los Angeles-based designer Christina Kim collects scraps from the complicated sari-weaving process and reworks them into new articles of clothing. (草莓传媒/Rachel Nania)
Luisa Cevese, a former high-ranking administrator in an industrial textile mill, grew tired of watching scraps fall on the factory floor, only to get swept up and thrown in the trash. So she decided to find a new use for the unwanted materials. 鈥淪he cleaned up the factory floor, cut up the remnants and sandwiched them between polyurethane sheets and fused them together and has created handbags and other fashion products,鈥 said聽Camille Ann Brewer, curator of contemporary art at the聽George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum. (草莓传媒/Rachel Nania)
The exhibit 鈥淪craps: Fashion, Textiles and Creative Reuse鈥 is on display through Jan. 7, 2018. (草莓传媒/Rachel Nania)
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Cevese, a former high-ranking administrator in an industrial textile mill, grew tired of watching scraps fall on the factory floor, only to get swept up and thrown in the trash. So she decided to find a new use for the unwanted materials.

鈥淪he cleaned up the factory floor, cut up the remnants and sandwiched them between polyurethane sheets and fused them together and has created handbags and other fashion products,鈥 Brewer said.

Similarly, designer Sudo saves the often-discarded kibiso (the outermost layer of the silk cocoon that protects the silk fiber), which she spins into a fine yarn that can be machine woven, and Los Angeles designer Kim collects scraps from the complicated sari-weaving process and reworks them into new articles of clothing.

鈥淚n the fashion industry, about 15 percent of the material is considered [waste] and is built into the process as waste,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淸Kim] saves everything. She鈥檚 come down to 2 percent waste; her goal is 0 percent waste.鈥

Brewer hopes the museum鈥檚 new exhibit, which opened to the public on Sept. 2, will make consumers think twice before casually discarding clothing and purchasing new pieces.

鈥淚 hope people come out to see these creative solutions to a major problem that we have, globally,鈥 she said. 聽

鈥淭he snowball effect will happen when the consumers ask for [something] different in the marketplace. And until that happens, we鈥檒l continue to see the large volume of textiles produced.鈥

The museum will host a number of programs throughout the exhibit鈥檚 duration, including patchwork workshops and lectures with the designers. A trunk show, a fashion show and panel discussions are also on the calendar.聽 for more information.

 

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