Fashion

Can the creative industries lead us to a sustainable future?

Taking part in the Talkaoke session will be:

Prof. Frances Corner, - Head of College, London College of Fashion (UAL),
Michael Pawlyn - Director, Exploration Architecture
Tim Brown - CEO and president of global design consultancy, IDEO
Franny Armstrong - Director of The Age of Stupid and founder of 10:10
Victoria Brooks - Sustainability Strategy Director, Naked Communications
Find out more about the speakers here.

To watch the event live just use the following link: http://www.creativeindustriesktn.org/live/

We want to hear from you too, so give us your reactions to the speakers and let us know how you think the creative indutries can help us create a more sustainable future:
via twitter @forum4thefuture during the event
or email l.armstrong@forumforthefuture.org after the event.

For more information about the webstreaming get in touch with Louise Armstrong on the email address above or call +44 (0)20 7324 3650.

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Electronic fashion lights up

Researchers at Stanford University have opened the gates for affordable electronic fashion that could see t-shirts charge your phone or redesign themselves before your eyes.

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Can the creative industries lead us to a sustainable future?

Chris Sherwin, 13th May 2010, General, Innovation
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Britain’s ‘creative industries’ generate £67bn of revenue and are growing at twice the rate of the rest of the economy. But as well as their economic muscle, these industries have a vital role to play in delivering a sustainable future.

Formally defined as the performing arts, arts & antiques, crafts, architecture, design, fashion, advertising, radio & TV, film & video, music, publishing, video games and software, the UK’s creative industries’ innovation and energy will be key in addressing the great challenges of our time – resource scarcity, climate change, waste, pollution, a growing population and poverty.

We’ve teamed up with the Creative Industries Knowledge Transfer Network to help leading players across these diverse sectors come together to share their knowledge and build a vision for how these problems will be tackled. The project kicks off on 16th June with an event chaired by Jonathon Porritt. Contributions from Lord Puttnam and Sebastian Conran will accompany a panel debate in an innovative, interactive talk-show format with a panel that includes 10:10 and ‘Age of Stupid’s’ Franny Armstrong, IDEO CEO Tim Brown, London College of Fashion’s Frances Corner OBE, Naked Communication's Victoria Brooks and Exploration Architecture’s Michael Pawlyn.

This is no stab in the dark – throughout history creative interventions have driven important social change. The Bauhaus movement championed a design philosophy of fairness and utility, to provide universal access to good design, better housing, and better lives for all. Graphic and film propaganda helped galvanise our nation to successful action during WWII and social marketing over the last 20 years has helped educate, raise awareness and communicate better thinking and acting on issues as wide as anti-social behaviour on trains, healthy lifestyles and anti-smoking.

And already, new forms of social media – enabled by software and IT platforms like twitter, kiva or netsquared – are helping to bridge social divides, connect people without travel and encourage good deeds. Green architecture is now mainstream and many of our flagship examples of building excellence heavily feature sustainability considerations – think the Gherkin, EDEN project, Olympics Village, etc.

But this is not yet universal across all of the creative industries and some disciplines are certainly more engaged and active on sustainability than others. There is also a larger question of whether industries are really leading, rather than following or responding to sustainability.

We think that building a genuinely sustainable future – that is green, fair and prosperous – will need us to inspire and motivate people, businesses, communities and societies to quite radical changes. This is an opportunity, even an imperative, the scale of which we probably haven’t faced before. It offers a fantastic new set of innovation levers to rethink and reinvent the world which is exactly what ‘creatives’ do really well. That’s precisely why creative industry involvement will be key to making this happen. It falls to this generation of creatives, scientists, designers and innovators to imagine a world they want to live in and then build it to last.

We’ll be running a series of events and creating an online dialogue over the next few months – in an open process designed to exchange and capture the best thinking. So, if you’re from either a creative industry or are a sustainability professional, we want to hear from you.

To share your thoughts on the creative industries and sustainability or to find out how to get involved, email Louise Armstrong or message us on Twitter @forum4thefuture.

 

Slow fashion changes gear

For the past twenty years, we’ve lived in a time of fast fashion – cheap, disposable and deeply unsustainable. Now that’s all set to change – even if the clothes look much the same. Trish Lorenz and Martin Wright peer down the catwalks of the future.

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From trash to fashion

A women’s cooperative in Rio is reworking old scraps for world-renowned designers.

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Fashion Futures 2025

February 2010

Fashion Futures is a call for a sustainable fashion industry. It’s designed to help organisations in all sectors take action which will safeguard their future, protect our environment and improve the lives of their customers, workers and suppliers around the world.

Four vivid scenarios explore how climate change, resource shortages, population growth and other factors will shape the world of 2025 and the future of the fashion industry within it. They are designed as a tool to challenge companies’ strategies, inspire them with new opportunities and help them plan for the future.

Download now: Fashion Futures 2025

Why Levi’s blue jeans are turning green

Michael Kobori, Vice President of Social and Environmental Sustainability at Levi Strauss & Co., tells Anna Simpson why the iconic brand is convinced sustainability is the future of fashion.

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Fashion's sustainable future brought to life in new Forum project

Fiona Bennie, 24th February 2010, Futures, Retail
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Coco Chanel once said, “Fashion is made to become unfashionable.”
So how can an industry become sustainable when the ‘we loved it, but now we shun it’ cycle is embedded so deeply? Do we have to change everything we love about fashion to make it a sustainable, fair industry? Not necessarily.

Last night, amid the glamour and excitement of London Fashion Week, we held a drinks party with Levi Strauss & Co., to launch our joint report Fashion Futures which explores the world of 2025 and the role of the fashion industry within it. More than a hundred fashion industry folk turned up to hear about our four vivid scenarios and view the animations, which bring them to life.

Follow this link to find out what kind of worlds might see cities inundated by second-hand department stores; high-street brands competing on sustainability credentials; people partying in biodegradable, spray-on outfits; and regions where grow-your-own clothing is popular.

We created the scenarios to help companies around the globe navigate the ever-changing challenge of developing sustainable businesses. They compel us to mull over big questions we wouldn’t usually consider when thinking short-term. Like how the industry will react to shortages of cotton and other raw materials – or how people will care for their clothes in a future of water shortages and high energy prices – which raises deeper questions like whether current business models will survive in a retail market that’s very different from today.

We have deliberately avoided making Fashion Futures a read-it-then-shelve-it report. We want companies of all shapes and sizes, from all corners of the globe, to use the four scenarios. We want them to be inspired, perhaps even a little scared by some of them, but hopefully motivated to think differently about the future and excited by the idea that a sustainable fashion industry is achievable.

To this end, we’ve published some workshop materials on our website with advice on how to use the scenarios to shape strategy, push for sustainable design and innovation and generate the skills needed for a sustainable industry.

And we’ve brought the scenarios to life with four powerful two-minute animations, which show just how different they are, and how much a sustainable future depends on us taking bold action today.

Fashion Futures has already been put to practical use. Our project partner, Levi Strauss & Co. is using the scenarios internally, to inform strategy and innovation. As Michael Kobori (pictured), LS&Co’s Vice President of Social and Environmental Sustainability said at the launch party yesterday, "These scenarios are so stimulating, we will be sharing them with senior management to inform our broad strategies, with designers to spur them to create more sustainable products, and with all employees to unleash the power of our entire company to think about sustainability."

And we’ve used them to help fashion students understand how to design for the future, working with the great team at the Centre for Sustainable Fashion at the London College of Fashion. Four groups of students from the 2009-10 MA Fashion and the Environment – a diverse and enthusiastic bunch from all over the world - spent their autumn term living and breathing one of the Fashion Futures scenarios, creating new ideas and businesses that would thrive in such a world. They not only produced some great, thought-provoking concepts, which are illustrated in our report, but they also helped us shape the scenarios at one of the critical stages of development.

So this is the beginning of an exciting journey. We’re looking forward to helping our partners and others use the scenarios and we’re excited to hear how other organisations will use them in innovative ways.


Find out more about the Fashion Futures project here: http://www.forumforthefuture.org/projects/fashion-futures
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